AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

The $2 per hour worker behind the OnlyFans boom

BBC profiles a Philippines-based 'chatter' who impersonates OnlyFans models in online chats, earning under $2 an hour for 8-hour shifts, five days a week, with targets to push hundreds of dollars in sales per shift. The work, done for agencies, involves sexting and selling explicit content; she finds it emotionally 'icky' and morally troubling, feeling she deceives fans. Unions warn about the unregulated nature of such online work and potential legal risks amid Philippine anti-pornography laws. Some later improved pay within another agency, but rates remain very low. OnlyFans says it has a relationship only with creators.

HN Comments

UBI Is Your Productivity Dividend – The Only Way to All Share What We All Built

The article argues that productivity gains since the 1970s have not been shared, with income rising for executives and shareholders while wages stagnate. It contends that Universal Basic Income is the only way to distribute gains to everyone as a cash dividend, since both AI and its data came from public and collective work. It cites RAND and EPI data and proposes about $1,400 per month per adult and $500 per month per child, funded by taxes on wealth or AI-related revenues, with Alaska’s Permanent Fund as a precedent. It rejects job guarantees or targeted benefits as substitutes.

HN Comments

Show HN: GitAgent – An open standard that turns any Git repo into an AI agent

GitAgent is an open standard for Git-native AI agents, enabling seamless integration of AI agents with Git workflows and tooling.

HN Comments

An Ode to Bzip

Purplesyringa tests compressors on a 327 KB Lua file for ComputerCraft and finds bzip2/bzip3 beat all LZ77-based codecs. Uncompressed 327 KB; gzip/zopfli ~75 KB; zstd/xz/brotli ~68 KB; bzip2 -9 63 KB; bzip3 61 KB. BWT-based approach groups contexts and needs no extensive heuristics, making decoding compact and deterministic; LZ77-based methods rely on backreferences. Decoder size can be kept small by dropping compatibility. An ad-hoc bzip2-like encoder achieves ~67 KB. Conclusion: for text/code, bzip offers the best ratio with simpler heuristics and acceptable speed tradeoffs.

HN Comments

The United States of Eugenics

The piece argues eugenics is a rising force in U.S. politics and culture, reinforced by Trump and a tech‑driven rightward shift. It traces eugenics from early 20th‑century American policy and Nazi influence to today’s practices—sterilization, coercive contraception, criminalizing poverty, and selective immigration—promoted under a guise of merit and whiteness. It stresses liberal complicity, internalized ableism, anti‑Blackness, antisemitism, and other biases that normalize harm to disabled, poor, and marginalized people. The author calls for a broad cultural reckoning, inclusive solidarity, and, some argue, dismantling aspects of the United States to end eugenic thinking.

HN Comments

AI Gets Wrong Woman Jailed for Six Months, Life Ruined

YouTube page footer listing company links (About, Press, Copyright, Contact us, Creators, Advertise, Developers, Terms, Privacy Policy & Safety, How YouTube works, Test new features, NFL Sunday Ticket) and © 2026 Google LLC.

HN Comments

What happens when US economic data becomes unreliable

The page could not load due to a 403 Forbidden error.

HN Comments

HP has new incentive to stop blocking third-party ink in its printers

Int’l ITC accuses HP of using Dynamic Security firmware updates to brick third‑party ink and toner, conflicting with EPEAT 2.0 rules. EPEAT 2.0 (Dec 2025) requires support for remanufactured cartridges or an approved alternative. HP issued firmware 2602A/B in Jan 2026 for about 11 models, drawing criticism that HP prioritizes profit over environmental standards. The Int’l ITC notes HP is uniquely aggressive in lockouts. No printers are yet registered under EPEAT 2.0. HP did not respond to comment requests.

HN Comments

Everything you never wanted to know about visually-hidden

David Bushell traces the visually-hidden CSS technique from its WCAG-era origins through decades of hacks (off-screen, 0×0, clip, clip-path, 1px boxes, nowrap, negative margins) to today. He explains why developers hide content (screen-readers) and the risks of such hacks, including focus quirks and cross-browser quirks. The piece surveys “minimum viable” options (Ana Tudor’s absolute + clip-path circle(0) among others) and the broader native-hidden debate, arguing that hidden content is a workaround, not a fix. He emphasizes testing across browsers/assistive tech and prioritizing semantic structure and accessible labeling.

HN Comments

Online astroturfing: A problem beyond disinformation

Could not summarize article.

HN Comments

NMAP in the Movies

Catalog of on-screen uses of the Nmap security scanner in films and TV, highlighting its relative realism in hacking scenes and noting Matrix Reloaded as a pivotal moment. The piece then details numerous movies with Nmap appearances (e.g., Ocean’s 8, Snowden, Dredd, Elysium, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, Bourne Ultimatum, Die Hard 4, G.I. Joe: Retaliation, Justice League: Doom, 13: Game of Death, Battle Royale, and more), often specifying scenes, NSE scripts, or screenshots and crediting discoverers. It invites readers to submit new sightings; updates were posted in 2020.

HN Comments

Show HN: Ink – Deploy full-stack apps from AI agents via MCP or Skills

Ink provides AI-agent infrastructure with built-in observability, real-time metrics, and self-diagnosing autoscaling. The Human Dashboard surfaces structured logs, level-based filtering, and full-text search for build and runtime outputs. Real-time CPU, memory, and network charts help agents adapt resources on the fly. Pricing is per-minute with no idle charges; $2 free credit to start; memory and CPU rates apply. Universal deployment supports Docker, buildpacks, or auto-detected stacks across Node.js, Python, Go, React, etc. Part of the Freysa Sovereign Agent ecosystem (Ink MCP).

HN Comments

Cookie Jars Capture American Kitsch (2023)

Cookie jars are back as art and nostalgia, not just containers for cookies. Modern jars feature whimsy and pop-culture icons, with collaborations like Supreme x Pillsbury and Williams-Sonoma’s Mickey Mouse, plus sleek Paul McCobb designs at CB2. Artisans like Hazy Mae handcraft jars (about six weeks) priced around $800–$850. Vintage jars remain collectible (Chicago’s Jazz’e Junque; Mercedes Bolduc), though counterfeit fears fuel a renewed ‘90s vibe. Jars serve as personal expressions and conversation pieces, even if cookies stored in them stay fresh only briefly.

HN Comments

AI Didn't Simplify Software Engineering: It Just Made Bad Engineering Easier

The piece argues that AI hasn’t simplified software engineering; it’s just made code production easier while core engineering work—defining behavior, architecture, tests, and long-term alignment—remains essential. Using an aircraft-maintenance analogy, it warns that faster code generation risks spec drift, where specifications, tests, and implementation diverge and reliability erodes. The pattern repeats from the Visual Basic era: democratized coding doesn’t replace engineering discipline. AI can aid exploration and design, but cannot replace professional expertise or the need for rigorous alignment, testing, and governance.

HN Comments

Montana Leads the Nation with Groundbreaking Right to Compute Act

Could not summarize article.

HN Comments

The Forth Language [Byte Magazine Volume 05 Number 08]

Byte Magazine, August 1980, themed around FORTH. Features include What is FORTH? A Tutorial Introduction; Breakforth into FORTH; FORTH Extensibility; Construction of a Fourth-Generation Video Terminal Part 1; The Evolution of FORTH; Khachiyan's Algorithm; plus regular columns (editorial, letters, reviews). Also hardware pieces: Build-it-yourself Modem for Under $50 and The Hard-Disk Explosion for mass storage, plus various BYTE features and product reviews.

HN Comments

Starlink Militarization and Its Impact on Global Strategic Stability

Could not summarize article.

HN Comments

Nominal Types in WebAssembly

WebAssembly historically used structural typing: same-shaped types are equivalent, with modules partitioned into equivalence classes; rec groups loosely approximate nominal typing for self/mutual recursion. The nominal typing proposal adds true nominal types via tag declarations (tag $v (param $secret i32)), using param fields, no subtyping or mutability. Constructing values relies on exception mechanics (throw/catch) and accessors use catch-based semantics. Tags can be exported/imported for cross-module composition. The post notes these ideas align with the exception-handling proposal and are partly tongue-in-cheek.

HN Comments

Philosoph Jürgen Habermas Gestorben

Der Philosoph und Soziologe Jürgen Habermas ist im Alter von 96 Jahren in Starnberg gestorben. Eine der einflussreichsten Stimmen Deutschlands prägte Gegenwartstheorie und Diskursethik. Seine Laufbahn begann am Frankfurter Institut für Sozialforschung; 1961 habilitierte er mit Strukturwandel der Öffentlichkeit, 1964 übernahm er die Horkheimer-Professur in Frankfurt. Aus seiner Antrittsvorlesung entstand Erkenntnis und Interesse (1968). Ab 1971 leitete er das Max-Planck-Institut in Starnberg; 1983 kehrte er nach Frankfurt zurück und wurde 1994 emeritiert. In späteren Äußerungen behandelte er Kosovo, Hirnforschung und Religionskonflikte; er litt an einer angeborenen Gaumenspalte.

HN Comments

The Browser Becomes Your WordPress

WordPress unveils my.WordPress.net, a browser‑based WordPress that runs entirely in your browser with no sign‑up, hosting, or domain decisions. Built on WordPress Playground, it creates a permanent, personal WordPress environment private by default and not accessible from the public internet. Data stays in your browser; each device has its own installation, with backups downloadable. An App Catalog offers one-click, preconfigured experiences for personal use (Personal CRM, Personal RSS Reader) and an AI Workspace powered by the Playground assistant. Storage starts ~100 MB; first launch is longer. Start at my.WordPress.net.

HN Comments

Made by Johno Whitaker using FastHTML