AI Summarized Hacker News

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ATProto Permissioned Data Proposal Draft

An early-draft proposal for “Permissioned Data” (PR #94) in bluesky-social/proposals by dholms. It cautions that details, terminology, and behaviors will likely change and points to a friendly introduction via Leaflets. The PR starts work on 0016: Permissioned Data and 0015: JSON Event Stream Encoding, with initial commits and a review by iameli. Feedback is invited on the PR or the community forum; the page shows loading errors, reactions, and standard GitHub PR metadata.

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In memory of the man who put red and green squiggles under words

Raymond Chen memorializes Tony Krueger, the Word developer who made spell-check unobtrusive by introducing automatic red squiggles (later green for grammar). Krueger contributed across many Word versions and even reverse-engineered the MS-DOS version to reimplement the feature for Windows. The post weaves in anecdotes—Penn & Teller’s reaction, Weird Al’s Word Crimes cameo—and emphasizes how Krueger's squiggles shaped modern spell/grammar highlighting.

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Trains halted across Germany because of communication system problem

A nationwide failure of the GSM-R communications system forced Germany's rail network to halt all trains Tuesday, stranding travelers as Deutsche Bahn worked to resolve the issue. Passengers queued at stations; DB offered taxi and hotel vouchers and kept some trains in stations. Within about two hours, service began to resume on parts of the network, though delays and cancellations persisted, especially on Berlin's network, with full normal service not expected until at least 6 a.m. Wednesday. GSM-R is the standard rail communication system used between drivers and control centers; repairs underway, cause not disclosed.

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United Wizards of the Coast recognized by NLRB

Arena workers at United Wizards of the Coast have officially formed a union with the Communications Workers of America (UWOTC-CWA) after a successful election. They thank petition signers, journalists, supporters, and CWA stewards. They say change is possible when workers stand together and hope to announce a ratified contract soon.

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California AB 2047 makes 3d printers off-limits to students, educators, business

Opposition summary: California AB 2047 would force all CA 3D printers to include DOJ-certified firearm-blocking tech, require attestations, and be listed on an approved registry by 2029, effectively restricting sales of many printers (including open-source and hobby models). The page argues the technology is unreliable, would violate First Amendment rights, and would disrupt education and small businesses (1.5M+ students; 30,000+ CA businesses; $10.5B invested). It outlines a six‑step rollout, legal/technical flaws, and urges action—contact legislators, sign petitions, and share—before the Senate committees decide the bill.

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WaPo Loves Data Centers More Than Disclosing Bezos's Financial Interest in Them

Paul Farhi argues The Washington Post’s opinion pages aggressively back data-center expansion to boost the economy and AI, but rarely disclose owner Jeff Bezos’s Amazon stake or the paper’s OpenAI/AWS ties. While Post news coverage notes Bezos, editorials largely omit these conflicts, prompting ethics experts to call for greater transparency to preserve credibility.

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F* file system – file search that reads SSD directly bypassing OS kernel

FFS is a command-line file search tool that bypasses the OS kernel by reading raw disk blocks directly, instead of using the VFS. It supports Linux file systems (ext4, btrfs) and Apple APFS, can search detached volumes and disk images without mounting, and uses OpenMP to parallelize. It may require sudo and, on macOS, disabling SIP to read the main disk. It can be faster than ripgrep on large datasets due to direct disk access. Build requires libzstd and OpenMP; use make.

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All train services in Germany halted after train radio communications disruption

All train services in Germany were halted after a disruption to train radio communications.

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German Rail Service Suspended Due to Radio Interference

Navigation page for blue News and blue services. Highlights include News sections (Switzerland, International, Sport, Football, Digital, People, Lifestyle), sport/entertainment content, and product lines (blue, blue+, blue TV, blue Sport, blue SuperMax, blue Cinema). Customer offerings cover Residential, Mobile, Internet, TV, Combi, Subscriptions and Devices. Support tools include Email Support, Phone Book, Shop Finder, Help. Company info features About blue, Careers, Advertising, Privacy Policy, Imprint, Journalistic Guidelines, Cookie Settings. Language options: DE FR IT EN.

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Scars mark Britain's economy 10 years after Brexit vote

Could not summarize article.

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Show HN: The Cascade Graph – An interactive map of AI and energy constraints

The Cascade Graph is a directed knowledge graph of the physical economy showing how stress flows from drivers through gatekeepers and chokepoints to tickers. It maps 393 nodes (drivers, chokepoints, geographies, jurisdictions, substitutes, tickers), 562 mechanism edges, and 17 feedback loops, with plain-language, sourced edges. It highlights problem vs. solution plays, provides vetted instruments with liquidity data, and offers an accessible Cascade Index that works without JavaScript. Examples include Copper Chokepoint, Nuclear Inevitability, and Northern Pivot. Not investment advice.

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Printing Gaussian Splats

Could not summarize article.

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Don't verify email addresses by sending spam to them

The piece argues that validating email addresses by sending spam is futile. It describes Pangram’s sign-up form posting to a validate-email endpoint, which triggers spam-like emails. Spammers rotate domains and retry from different servers, but many deliveries are blocked or rejected by filters. The author calls the approach absurd and ineffective, noting Pangram’s legitimate mail is sent via Mailgun and that validation should rely on verification links rather than pre-delivery checks.

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AI Hiring Tools Yield Racial Bias and Systemic Rejection; 26% Black & 15% Asian

Stanford’s study of hiring algorithms (3.4 million applicants, 4 million applications to 1,700 postings across 150 employers) shows AI screening can worsen racial bias. Using a single vendor, it finds adverse impact: 26% of Black and 15% of Asian applicants face lower eligibility rates; if these groups were treated as the most-favored, about 40,000 more would advance. Adverse impact emerges per job, not when aggregated. Algorithmic monoculture—many applicants screened by the same vendor—predicts higher chances of being rejected from all roles, with 10% of multi-applicants fully rejected. Tools are pervasive and opaque; independent research and policy are needed.

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FUTO Swipe – A new swipe typing model

FUTO Swipe provides open, on-device swipe-typing models for FUTO Keyboard, offering privacy-friendly, offline predictions (server demo exists). A 1-million-swipe MIT-licensed dataset (collected via swipe.futo.org, 2024; released on HuggingFace in 2025) fuels three model types: Encoder (universal), ContextLM (language-specific), and a QWERTY English decoder. With beam width 300, top-4 fail ~4%, error rate under 1% (benchmark-dependent). Total parameters ≈ 2.49M (Encoder 0.64M, Decoder 0.30M, ContextLM ~1.5M). Runs on low-end devices; C++ library swipe-library handles inference and beam search. Licenses: models under FUTO Model License; library under GPL.

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Anthropic updates their terms to verify age or identity

Anthropic's Privacy Policy (effective July 8, 2026) explains how Claude.ai and related Services collect, use, disclose, and protect personal data. It covers data you provide (identity, contact, payment, inputs/outputs, feedback, verification), automatic tech data (device, usage, cookies), and data used to train models (public data, third‑party datasets, user inputs/outputs unless you opt out; exceptions for safety reviews or reports). It describes recipients (affiliates, service providers, third‑party integrations, government, researchers), your rights (access, deletion, correction, objection, portability, withdrawal of consent), data transfers, retention, and security. Includes regional disclosures for Canada, Brazil, and Korea.

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The worthlessness of Vitamin D is mildly exaggerated

Vitamin D isn’t a miracle. Observational links between higher 25(OH)D and better health don’t prove causation, and major randomized trials mostly find no meaningful benefits from supplementation for people with non-severe vitamin D levels. The three megatrials (WHI, VITAL, D-Health) show no clear reduction in cancer, CVD, or all-cause mortality, though some meta-analyses hint at small benefits, especially with daily rather than bolus dosing. Biologically, vitamin D acts beyond bones, and storage vitamin D can affect tissues via receptors, complicating simple stories. For those with true deficiency (<25 nmol/L), supplementation is reasonable; otherwise, effects are likely small.

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Fired by Google for Creating the Google Workspace CLI

Justin Poehnelt says he was fired by Google for creating the Google Workspace CLI, which went viral, topped Hacker News, and drew thousands of GitHub stars and users within days. He recounts being grilled by legal over Google branding on the repo and suggests a fear of disruption by Workspace and some leaders. The firing came two days after Google Cloud Next announced an official Workspace CLI. He shares his story to own it as part of his healing after nearly seven years at Google, thanking his teammates and manager.

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Performance Improvements in Libffi

Libffi now offers an optional prebuilt plan to speed up calls by caching argument placement. Normally ffi_call re-derives how to marshal each argument every time, costing heavy bookkeeping. The plan, built once with ffi_call_plan_alloc, encodes a flat sequence of moves (GP64, sign-extend, SSE, or stack spills). At runtime, ffi_call_plan_invoke runs the precomputed moves and makes the call, with a small thunk for eager paths. Benchmarks show plan path about 6x faster than ffi_call and around 3x overhead vs a direct call; x86-64 only for acceleration, API portable elsewhere. Not released yet; HEAD.

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The deadly rise of giant trucks and SUVs

By the 2010s, SUVs and pickups eclipsed cars on American roads, and their taller hoods and larger blind spots have helped drive a rise in pedestrian deaths—up about 75% since 2009. A NYT analysis links the shift to heightened lethality: hood heights rising about 3 inches since 2002; pickups now around four feet tall; blind zones in popular trucks have grown markedly. Model suggests 200–400 pedestrians per year would have survived if vehicle sizes hadn’t grown, totaling about 3,000 deaths 2016–2024. Technology helps but isn’t foolproof; regulators have lagged, while bigger vehicles remain highly profitable and widely marketed.

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