Monday, April 6, 2026

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US Jet Down Over Iran! Pilot Saved!

US Jet Down Over Iran! Pilot Saved!

War, Moonshots, and the Fight for Our Gadgets

  • US Jet Downed In Iran, Pilot Dramatically Rescued

    A US fighter jet goes down in Iran, the pilot is pulled out in a high‑risk mission that sounds like a streaming thriller, and everyone else is left asking how close we now are to a much bigger war. Tech folks are quietly wondering what this means for cyberattacks and satellite networks too.

  • Iran Vows ‘Annihilation’ Of OpenAI’s Stargate Campus

    Iran’s Revolutionary Guard publicly threatens “complete and utter annihilation” of OpenAI’s Stargate megadatacenter if its power grid is hit. It sounds cartoonishly over the top, but it underlines a creepy truth: AI server farms are now treated like critical infrastructure – and potential wartime targets.

  • Campaign Slams Meta’s Always-On Ray-Ban AI Glasses

    A European site, Banray.eu, lays out why camera‑equipped Ray‑Ban Meta glasses are basically wearable surveillance. Between face search tools like PimEyes and clueless bystanders, it paints a world where you’re on candid camera 24/7, and regulators are still half asleep at the wheel.

  • Switzerland’s 25 Gbit Fiber Shames US ‘Free Market’

    Switzerland quietly rolls out 25 Gbit symmetric fiber while Americans argue with cable companies for basic service. The piece demolishes the idea that unregulated markets magically deliver good internet, and instead shows how planning, shared ducts, and real competition make US broadband look like a bad joke.

  • Artemis II Crew Gets First Look At Moon’s Far Side

    The Artemis II astronauts describe the eerie thrill of seeing the Moon’s far side with their own eyes from the Orion spacecraft. It’s a rare piece of good news: actual humans going back toward the Moon while the rest of the headlines are about wars, climate, and AI drama.

AI Titans Stumble While New Toys Take Over

  • OpenAI Shares Stall As Investors Rush To Anthropic

    Secondary markets say OpenAI stock is suddenly hard to dump, with around $600M stuck while buyers chase Anthropic instead. After a year of board drama and trust issues, it feels like the grown‑up money is quietly voting with its feet, and Claude is now wearing the “serious AI” crown.

  • Microsoft Says Copilot Is Basically Just For Fun

    Buried in Microsoft’s terms: Copilot is “for entertainment purposes,” not to be relied on for anything critical. Meanwhile the marketing pitches it as your work copilot. That whiplash makes it clear who they’re really protecting – not users, but Microsoft’s lawyers, when the AI hallucinates something disastrous.

  • Google Sneaks Gemma 4 AI Onto Your iPhone

    Through the Google AI Edge Gallery app, Gemma 4 now runs locally on iPhones, powering things like offline Wikipedia chat. No cloud, no subscription, just your phone doing the thinking. It’s a quiet but huge shift toward on‑device AI that could sidestep a lot of the current privacy hand‑waving.

  • Gemma Gem Runs Big-Name AI Right In Your Browser

    Gemma Gem stuffs Google’s Gemma 4 model straight into your browser with WebGPU, no API keys, no data leaving your machine. It’s exactly the kind of nerdy, privacy‑respecting project people want while cloud AI vendors talk about trust but keep slurping up everyone’s inputs and logs.

  • Tiny GuppyLM Shows You Can Train Your Own AI

    GuppyLM is a 9M‑parameter toy model trained in about five hours on a single Colab notebook, and it still manages to talk like a snarky little fish. It’s not about power, it’s about education: a clear, open recipe for how LLMs work, without the mystical hand‑waving and billion‑dollar budgets.

Nerd Fights, Robot Labor, and Corporate Own-Goals

  • Gabe Newell Funds Flatpak While Linux Argues About Init

    A rant points out that Gabe Newell is effectively pouring “yacht money” into Flatpak and making games actually work on Linux, while parts of the community still obsess over ancient init system flame wars. It’s a brutal, funny reminder of how often open‑source energy gets wasted on side quests.

  • Ubuntu Now Needs More RAM Than Windows 11

    The latest Ubuntu 26.04 LTS bumps its RAM requirements above Windows 11, killing the old myth that desktop Linux is always lighter. Users are grumbling that the once lean, hacker‑friendly distro is drifting into bloated, corporate territory, right as people look for real alternatives to big‑vendor OSes.

  • Japan’s Robots Take The Jobs No Human Wants

    With a shrinking population and brutal labor shortages, Japan is going all‑in on physical AI and industrial robots to staff factory and warehouse work humans avoid. It’s pragmatic and a bit dystopian: robots aren’t coming for white‑collar jobs here, they’re just quietly taking the dirtiest shifts.

  • Italian TV Channel Copyright-Strikes Nvidia’s Own Trailer

    In a chef’s‑kiss copyright mess, Italian broadcaster La7 used Nvidia DLSS 5 footage, then fired off YouTube strikes at others – including people using Nvidia’s original trailer. Viewers see it as yet another example of automated copyright systems gone feral and TV networks not understanding the internet.

  • Peter Thiel Backs Solar Collars For High-Tech Cows

    Founders Fund is betting on solar‑powered smart collars that let farmers “remote control” grazing cows via audio cues and mild zaps. It’s peak 2026 energy: serious VC money, ‘zero to one’ rhetoric, and the internet asking whether we really needed to turn cattle into connected devices.

Top Stories

US Daring Rescue Deep Inside Iran War Zone

World / Defense

Live shooting war, US boots and jets in Iranian territory, and a behind‑enemy‑lines rescue that feels like a movie. Everyone is nervously watching for what this means for a wider regional or even cyber conflict.

Iran Threatens To Wipe Out OpenAI’s Stargate

Tech / Geopolitics

A nuclear‑level threat aimed at a $30B AI datacenter shows how data centers are now treated like oil refineries or power plants. AI infrastructure has officially become a geopolitical target.

Investors Dump OpenAI, Flock To Rival Anthropic

Business / AI

Hundreds of millions in OpenAI shares reportedly stuck on secondary markets as big money chases Anthropic instead. Feels like the first real vote of no‑confidence in the once‑untouchable AI golden child.

Microsoft Calls Copilot ‘Entertainment’ In Fine Print

Tech / Legal

Microsoft is stuffing Copilot everywhere, but its own terms quietly say it’s just for fun, not serious use. That gap between the hype and the legal reality has people wondering who’s on the hook when AI goes wrong.

Tiny Homegrown AI Model Demystifies The Magic

AI / Open Source

A 9‑million‑parameter toy model called GuppyLM trained on a single Colab notebook shows you don’t need a supercomputer to understand how this stuff works. Great antidote to the ‘only megacorps can do AI’ narrative.

Google Puts Gemma 4 AI Straight On iPhones

Mobile / AI

Google’s Gemma 4 now runs on iPhones via its AI Edge Gallery app. On‑device LLMs with no cloud dependency are moving from demo to reality, and that has big implications for privacy and app design.

Why Switzerland Gets 25 Gbit Internet And US Doesn’t

Policy / Infrastructure

A brutal takedown of the American ‘free market’ broadband myth. Switzerland’s 25 Gbit home fiber and the US’s patchy, overpriced internet become a case study in how regulation and public planning actually shape tech.

Sunday, April 5, 2026

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Iran Missiles Blast Gulf AWS Offline!

Iran Missiles Blast Gulf AWS Offline!

War, Clouds and Cars Shake the Tech World

  • Iran Missile Barrage Knocks Gulf AWS Offline

    Missile strikes on AWS data centers in Bahrain and Dubai sent whole cloud zones into "hard down" status, reminding everyone that our shiny "serverless" world still lives in real buildings in real war zones. The outage made the internet feel a lot less bulletproof overnight.

  • US Pours Stealth Missiles Into Iran War

    The US is deploying nearly its entire stock of JASSM‑ER long‑range cruise missiles into the Iran campaign, draining a weapon meant for other threats. It’s a flex and a warning: modern conflicts burn through high‑tech gear fast, and there might not be enough smart weapons to go around.

  • Tesla Sits On Record Pile Of Unsold Cars

    Tesla is reportedly sitting on about 50,000 unsold EVs, a record stash that makes those glossy promo shots look more like parking problems. With rivals cutting prices and demand wobbling, the once unstoppable EV king suddenly looks like just another carmaker praying for the next hit model.

  • One Injection Reverses Deafness In Weeks

    A new gene therapy from Karolinska Institutet restored hearing in people born with severe deafness after a single shot, with results published in Nature Medicine. It’s early, but the idea that a syringe can fix what used to be a lifelong disability has people whispering about a new era of one‑and‑done cures.

  • Scientists Chase Universal ‘Everything’ Vaccines

    Researchers are racing to build universal vaccines that cover whole families of fast‑mutating viruses instead of one strain at a time. After the chaos of Covid‑19, the pitch is simple: fewer boosters, faster responses, and maybe a future where new outbreaks get smothered before they turn into global pandemics.

AI Labs Race Ahead and Break Things

  • Claude Code Unearths 23‑Year‑Old Linux Flaw

    At an AI security event, an Anthropic researcher showed how Claude Code helped uncover multiple remotely exploitable bugs in the Linux kernel, including one hiding for 23 years. It’s exhilarating and unnerving: the same AI tools that help fix code might also turbo‑charge the hunt for zero‑days.

  • Study Shows LLMs Grow Their Own ‘Emotions’

    A deep dive into Claude Sonnet 4.5 found internal "emotion concepts" that can be dialed up or down by poking at its activations. The model doesn’t actually feel anything, but the fact we can steer its "mood" like a dimmer switch has people both fascinated and a little creeped out about how lifelike chatbots are becoming.

  • Apple Shows Simple Trick To Boost AI Coding

    An Apple paper claims a very basic self‑distillation trick lets a code LLM train on its own raw outputs and still get better, no fancy teacher models required. It’s the kind of low‑tech hack that makes giant, expensive training runs look wasteful and hints there’s still a lot of cheap performance left on the table.

  • Spicy Essay Argues AGI Already Arrived

    A widely shared piece bluntly states that current LLMs plus tools already meet a reasonable definition of AGI, and that the goalposts keep moving to avoid admitting it. Instead of math, it leans on vibes and capabilities, which is exactly why it’s driving everyone into loud, messy arguments about what "intelligence" even means.

  • Dev Asks: What If Browsers Built The UI

    A long, punchy rant says modern frontends are absurdly complex now that AI can already sketch working interfaces. The proposal: let the browser generate adaptive UIs from data, with LLMs helping instead of 15 JavaScript frameworks. It feels half dream, half prophecy, but the frustration with today’s frontend bloat is very real.

Money Moves, Inbox Drama and Nerdy Delights

  • Borrowers Flee US, Ghost Their Student Loans

    Some Americans crushed by student debt are moving abroad and simply not paying, betting that overseas life and weak enforcement beat decades of bills. It’s a mix of quiet desperation and cold math, and it makes the whole loan system look less like education finance and more like a lifetime trap to escape from.

  • Yes, A Real Store Runs Entirely On SQLite

    One team runs a full e‑commerce shop on plain SQLite, not as a toy but for real Stripe payments and real customers. With Rails 8 smoothing the edges, their message is blunt: you probably don’t need a giant database cluster, just a solid file and fewer moving parts to babysit at 3 a.m.

  • LLM‑Generated Passwords Look Strong But Are Weak

    A security deep dive shows LLM‑generated passwords are surprisingly predictable, thanks to patterns in how models spit out "random" text. They look messy to humans but form a small, guessable slice of all possible passwords. The takeaway is brutal: let a real password manager handle it, not a chat window.

  • New Browser Game Lets You Build A GPU

    A playful game called Mvidia dumps you into the role of a clueless engineer told to build a GPU from the transistor level up. It’s half lesson, half joke, and it hits that sweet spot where you’re actually learning hardware basics while laughing at how far real chips are from "just software".

  • Mailtrim Exposes Who Really Spams Your Gmail

    An open source tool called mailtrim scans your Gmail and reveals which senders are quietly flooding your inbox. One user found just three sources caused 30% of their mail. It’s oddly satisfying and a little embarrassing to see which "helpful" services are basically your personal spam factory.

Top Stories

Iran Blasts Knock Out AWS Cloud in Gulf

Technology

Missile strikes on AWS data centers turn a shooting war into a cloud war, exposing how fragile the ‘always on’ internet really is for businesses worldwide.

US Burns Through Stealth Missiles in Iran Fight

Defense

The US prepares to spend nearly its entire JASSM-ER stockpile, signaling a long, high‑tech air war and raising fears about depleted arsenals elsewhere.

Single Shot Gene Therapy Brings Hearing Back

Health

A one‑time injection reversing congenital deafness in weeks is the kind of medical breakthrough that makes ‘sci‑fi cure’ feel suddenly real.

Scientists Chase a One‑Shot ‘Everything’ Vaccine

Science

Universal vaccines that work across fast‑mutating viruses could rewrite the pandemic playbook and permanently change how we think about infectious disease.

Tesla Lots Fill Up with 50,000 Unsold EVs

Business

A mountain of idle Teslas screams that the EV gold rush is slowing, margins are shrinking, and the once untouchable brand is suddenly vulnerable.

Claude AI Digs Up 23‑Year‑Old Linux Bug

Cybersecurity

An AI coding tool finding fresh, remotely exploitable Linux kernel holes after two decades shows both the power and danger of machine‑assisted hacking.

Opinion Piece Declares ‘AGI Is Here’ Already

Artificial Intelligence

A provocative claim that today’s LLMs already qualify as AGI fuels the culture war over what ‘intelligence’ even means and how close we are to the edge.

Saturday, April 4, 2026

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US Warplane Blown From Iranian Sky!

US Warplane Blown From Iranian Sky!

War, Power, And Borders Shake The Wired World

  • US warplane shot down deep inside Iran

    Reports say a US F‑15E Strike Eagle was shot down over Iran, with one crew member rescued and another still missing. For a public already tense about Middle East wars, a front‑line jet going down feels like a line being crossed and makes high‑tech air power look far less invincible.

  • Iran attack knocks Amazon cloud offline in Gulf

    Strikes in the region reportedly left AWS availability zones in Bahrain and Dubai "hard down". It is a grim wake‑up call that our favorite "cloud" is just a bunch of vulnerable buildings, and that geopolitical fights can now rip entire apps and businesses off the internet in one night.

  • Germany quietly brings back travel permission for men

    New rules mean adult German men must request permission to leave the country for more than three months. Officials dress it up as administration, but plenty of people see a slippery slope toward a digital draft board, powered by databases and border checks instead of paper summons.

  • Europe asks if nuclear power can stop chaos

    With energy prices bouncing around and voters furious, European leaders are again flirting with nuclear power as a way out. Supporters talk about steady, low‑carbon electricity; critics warn of costs, waste, and a slow‑motion distraction while wind, solar, and batteries get cheaper every year.

AI Giants Slash Prices And Battle Jailbreakers

  • OpenAI cuts ChatGPT Business prices and adds perks

    OpenAI dropped the price of ChatGPT Business, added a cheaper code‑only seat, and tweaked limits, clearly trying to hook every small team still sitting on the fence. It feels less like generosity and more like a calculated land grab before rivals like Anthropic and Google catch up.

  • Hackers claim jailbreak of Anthropic's newest Claude model

    A repo boasting a jailbreak for Claude 4.6 made the rounds, claiming to bypass safety rules on Anthropic’s flagship model. Even if the exploit is messy or short‑lived, it undercuts all the "constitutional AI" marketing and shows prompt hackers still treat every safety update like a puzzle to beat.

  • Anthropic locks down Claude Code use for tools

    Anthropic told subscribers they can no longer funnel their Claude Code limits into third‑party harnesses like OpenClaw, pushing them to separate usage bundles. It feels like a classic platform squeeze: tighten the tap just as ecosystem devs start to rely on it, in the name of "fair use".

  • Developers swear by new Superpowers plugin for Claude

    A glowing review of the Superpowers plugin for Claude Code describes a night‑and‑day productivity jump, with smoother context handling and smarter project awareness. Devs are clearly hungry for glue tools that fix the rough edges labs leave behind, even if it means wiring yet another plugin.

  • New agent hub promises to tame messy coding bots

    The new ctx "Agentic Development Environment" pitches one control room for teams juggling multiple coding AI agents. Instead of tab‑hell between tools, you get a single pane with guardrails and logging. The idea clearly resonates with engineers tired of their AI helpers behaving like feral interns.

Hacks, Fees, And Software Drama Rock The Stack

  • Solana's Drift exchange drained in twelve minute raid

    Attackers used a governance hijack and a fake token to drain around $285M from Drift Protocol on Solana in about twelve minutes. For a space that keeps bragging about "DeFi 2.0" security, watching a flagship perp exchange get cleaned out this fast leaves people wondering who is really in control.

  • H.264 streaming license cap jumps to 4.5 million

    Via Licensing quietly replaced the old $100k annual cap for H.264 streaming with a tiered scheme topping out at $4.5M, blindsiding many in video tech. Creators and smaller platforms see it as rent‑seeking on ancient codecs and yet another nudge to finally flee toward newer, freer formats.

  • New memory attack can hijack PCs via Nvidia GPUs

    Researchers unveiled Rowhammer‑style tricks, nicknamed GDDRHammer and GeForge, that abuse Nvidia GPU memory in ways that can give attackers full control over a machine. It is the kind of hardware‑level hack that makes security folks groan, because you can’t exactly patch millions of graphics cards overnight.

  • LibreOffice foundation ejects its own core developers

    A scathing post claims The Document Foundation pushed out key LibreOffice developers tied to Collabora, igniting fears that politics and egos are winning over users. For many, it confirms a depressing pattern: the bigger open‑source gets, the more it starts to look like every other messy boardroom.

  • Site lists European alternatives to big US apps

    A Show HN project curates European alternatives to US giants like Google, Apple, and Dropbox, leaning on privacy and digital sovereignty to make its case. The reaction shows a clear hunger for tools that keep data closer to home and out of the usual handful of Silicon Valley clouds.

Top Stories

US jet downed over Iran rattles the world

World / Defense

A front-line US fighter going down deep in Iran is the kind of headline that makes everyone suddenly pay attention, raising fears of a wider war and questions about the limits of high-tech air power.

Iran strikes knock Amazon cloud offline in Gulf

Cloud / Security

Missiles no longer just threaten tanks and bases; they can take out the data centers running half the internet. AWS zones going dark in Bahrain and Dubai is a brutal demo of how physical war hits cloud life.

Germany quietly brings back exit controls for men

Politics / Civil Liberties

For many, a NATO democracy making adult men ask permission to leave the country screams Cold War throwback, fueling loud worries about creeping militarization and what conscription in a high‑tech era looks like.

OpenAI cuts ChatGPT Business prices and adds perks

AI / Business

OpenAI slashing ChatGPT Business costs and adding a cheap code seat feels like a land‑grab move, cranking up pressure on rivals and tempting every company holdout to finally wire their workflow into an AI.

Hackers claim jailbreak of Anthropic's newest Claude

AI / Security

A public jailbreak of Claude 4.6 hits Anthropic right where it sells itself hardest: safety. It reinforces the uneasy feeling that every new AI guardrail is really just a fresh challenge for prompt hackers.

H.264 streaming fees jump from 100k to 4.5M

Media / Business

The quiet decision to replace a flat $100k cap with a $4.5M top tier for H.264 streaming has people furious, renewing calls to ditch old video tech and reminding everyone why patent pools feel like toll booths.

Solana's Drift exchange loses $285M in minutes

Crypto / Security

A governance hijack draining $285M from Solana’s biggest perp exchange in about 12 minutes is the nightmare crypto folks pretend won’t happen anymore, and a brutal reminder how fragile "decentralized" finance still is.

Friday, April 3, 2026

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LinkedIn Caught Snooping On Your PC!

LinkedIn Caught Snooping On Your PC!

Big Tech Gets Caught With Its Hands Out

  • LinkedIn accused of snooping on your computer software

    An explosive report says LinkedIn, owned by Microsoft, quietly runs hidden code every time you visit, checking what software is installed on your machine. Users see it as corporate spyware, not “analytics,” and wonder how this isn’t treated like outright hacking.

  • Ex‑insider says Azure nearly blew OpenAI deal

    A former Azure Core engineer spills how bad product calls and corner‑cutting allegedly pushed OpenAI to the brink of leaving Microsoft’s cloud. It reads like a slow‑motion train wreck and makes developers question just how stable their favorite cloud really is.

  • EU breach shows how one misclick can open everything

    A forensic post‑mortem on the EU Europa breach blames sloppy identity and access management for letting ShinyHunters roam deep into systems. It’s a grim reminder that all the fancy encryption in the world can’t save you from badly wired permissions screens.

  • Iran claims missile hit on Oracle UAE facilities

    Iran’s IRGC says it struck Oracle infrastructure in the UAE, hinting that cloud data centers are now fair game in geopolitics. Even if details are murky, the idea that regional wars might start targeting AWS‑ and Oracle‑style hubs spooks the tech crowd.

  • Hijacked axios package shakes JavaScript world again

    Hackers took over an npm account and slipped two booby‑trapped versions of axios into the registry, infecting anyone who upgraded blindly. Developers are exhausted that vital open source tools rely on single accounts and think npm’s security model is still stuck in 2015.

AI Arms Race Rewrites How We Code

  • Google’s Gemma 4 targets phones and tiny gadgets

    Google launched new Gemma 4 models built to run on mobiles and IoT chips while still acting like little AI agents that can plan and call functions. It cranks up pressure on rivals and gives indie devs a serious open alternative to closed mega‑models.

  • Cursor 3 leans fully into agent‑first programming

    Cursor 3 pitches itself as an editor where AI agents write most of the code and humans just guide the conversation. Devs are excited and nervous: it looks magical in demos, but nobody’s sure what it means for junior hires or debugging weird AI‑authored logic.

  • Boss tells engineers to delete IDEs for AI tools

    One founder proudly ordered staff to scrap VS Code and PyCharm in favor of Anthropic’s AI tools, coining the term ADE (AI Development Environment). It sounds bold and slightly unhinged, and mirrors a broader anxiety that old‑school coding habits are on borrowed time.

  • Veteran dev says AI will reshape programming from root

    A seasoned Mac developer reflects on how tools like Claude and Codex are already changing day‑to‑day work. The tone is less hype, more sober: AI won’t replace programmers overnight, but it may quietly redefine what “programming” even means over the next decade.

  • Qwen3.6-Plus pushes towards real‑world AI agents

    Alibaba’s Qwen3.6‑Plus model is tuned for building agents that can actually poke at real systems, not just chat nicely. It’s another sign that every big lab wants a platform where bots read docs, hit APIs, and carry out tasks while we just watch and wince.

Hackers, Rockets, and Retro Geek Nostalgia

  • Artemis II readies 4K laser livestreams from Moon

    NASA’s Artemis II mission will shoot 4K video from lunar distance using a high‑speed laser link called O2O, piping footage back at around 260 Mbps. Space nerds love that the Moon landing reboot looks less like grainy Apollo and more like a YouTube live show.

  • US Code now lives on GitHub like real software

    The Office of Law Revision Counsel is managing federal law using Git on GitHub, where every change to the US Code is a commit. It’s catnip for civic hackers and a rare case where government transparency actually improves instead of getting buried in PDFs.

  • Bun team rewrites Git in Zig for 100x speedup

    The Bun runtime crew claim a wild 100x speed boost by re‑implementing key git operations in Zig. Even if you squint at the benchmarks, devs love the audacity, and it underlines how much time we quietly waste waiting for old tools to grind through repos.

  • Tailscale ships smoother macOS experience for secure networking

    Tailscale unveiled a refreshed macOS client that behaves more like a native citizen on modern Macs. Fans of its peer‑to‑peer VPN are pleased to see polish catch up with the hype, and it reinforces Tailscale’s role as the default “private internet” for many teams.

  • AI recruiting startup burned by LiteLLM supply attack

    Hiring platform Mercor says a breach came via compromised LiteLLM code, dragging yet another AI‑adjacent startup into the supply‑chain mess. It’s a harsh lesson that wiring trendy open source into your stack means inheriting all of its security drama too.

Top Stories

Google drops Gemma 4, aims at phones and bots

Artificial Intelligence

Google’s new Gemma 4 models promise smarter, smaller AI that can run on phones and gadgets while still doing agent-style tasks. It ramps up the open-model arms race and pressures both closed labs and indie dev tools.

Cursor 3 turns coding into a chat with an agent

Developer Tools / AI

Cursor 3 pushes the idea that future coding happens with AI agents that write most of the code. Devs are buzzing that this might be the first real taste of “AI-first IDEs” becoming the default way software gets built.

Ex‑engineer says Azure quietly lost developers’ trust

Cloud Computing / Business

A former Azure Core engineer lays out how a series of internal blunders and business choices nearly pushed OpenAI off Microsoft’s cloud. It feeds a growing fear that hyperscale cloud is fragile, political, and not nearly as solid as advertised.

LinkedIn accused of running secret spyware on visitors

Privacy / Big Tech

A viral investigation claims LinkedIn (and parent Microsoft) quietly scan visitors’ machines for installed software using hidden code. It hits a nerve with users already tired of tracking, and raises fresh calls to treat corporate data slurping like hacking.

Axios npm hack rattles the JavaScript supply chain again

Cybersecurity / Open Source

A maintainer account for axios was hijacked and pushed malicious versions to npm, spilling yet another reminder that the world’s web apps rest on a few tired volunteers and weak security. Devs are angry that critical plumbing is still this easy to poison.

US puts its entire law code into GitHub commits

Government / Digital Policy

The US Code is now managed like software, with every legal change a Git commit on GitHub. Policy wonks and programmers alike see it as a landmark for transparent lawmaking, and a sign that code tools are quietly eating government itself.

Artemis II promises 4K laser livestreams from the Moon

Space / Technology

NASA’s Artemis II will beam 4K video from the Moon using a laser link at a wild 260 Mbps, turning deep space into a high‑speed video shoot. It’s a flex of space tech and a reminder that we really are going back, this time with better cameras than Netflix.

Thursday, April 2, 2026

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NASA Blasts Us Back To The Moon!

NASA Blasts Us Back To The Moon!

Rockets Rise As Wars Reshape The Tech Map

  • Artemis II Launches Humanity Back Toward The Moon

    After decades of talking about going back, NASA finally lit the candle on Artemis II, sending four astronauts on a 10‑day loop around the Moon. Commenters are thrilled but wary: they love the romance of space, yet remember how often big programs get canceled mid‑story.

  • SpaceX Eyes Wall Street With Trillion Dollar Dreams

    Reports that SpaceX quietly filed to go public at a wild $1.75T valuation had everyone asking if we’ve learned anything from past bubbles. Fans say the company basically is orbital infrastructure now; skeptics see starry‑eyed investors lining up for another gravity check.

  • NYC Health Chief Says Some Radiologists Are Replaceable

    The head of NYC Health + Hospitals openly floated swapping some radiologists for AI once rules allow it. To tech people this sounds inevitable; to medical workers it feels like being told an algorithm will stare at their patients’ scans while they polish their résumés.

  • Iran War Sends Europeans Scrambling For Green Energy

    With the war on Iran rattling oil and gas, Europeans are buying solar panels, heat pumps, and EVs like they’re going out of stock. It’s a grim twist: bombs fall, and suddenly the boring home energy upgrades everyone delayed are the hottest tech in town.

  • Quantum Breakthroughs Promise Tougher Codes And Faster Cracks

    Fresh papers from Caltech and Google dropped real quantum computing advances that are very much not April Fools. They point to more practical fault‑tolerant machines and new cryptography tricks, leaving readers excited yet uneasy about how long today’s “unbreakable” codes stay safe.

AI Lab Secrets Spill And Prices Spark Fury

  • Claude Code Leak Exposes How AI Really Gets Built

    A stray .npmignore entry dumped Claude Code’s source map to npm, revealing internal prompts, feature flags and design warts. People in finance and other regulated fields are suddenly asking if trusting opaque AI coding tools with sensitive data was ever a sane move.

  • AI Helps Write Scary Bug In FreeBSD Operating System

    Researchers leaned on Claude to craft an attack on FreeBSD’s core networking that ends with a full remote takeover. The mood is unnerved: we wanted helpers that fix typos and write tests, but we’ve clearly crossed into machines that co‑author serious zero‑day‑style exploits.

  • Speak The Wrong Language And Your AI Bill Jumps

    A deep dive into token counts shows OpenAI, Google and others effectively charge some languages up to 60% more for the same AI job. Folks are rightly annoyed: we were promised a universal assistant, not a sneaky linguistic tax baked into the pricing spreadsheets.

  • AI Effortlessly Untangles Obscure JavaScript That Humans Hate

    Using the leaked Claude Code internals as a case study, this piece argues that obfuscating or minifying JavaScript is no longer real protection. Modern AI tools can reverse‑engineer tangled code in minutes, turning many old “security through obscurity” tricks into expensive theater.

  • Meta Uses AI To Mix Stronger Greener American Concrete

    Yes, Meta is now optimizing cement. Their BOxCrete work uses AI to tune concrete recipes that cut carbon while keeping buildings strong. It feels absurd that Facebook’s parent company is tweaking rebar and sand, but also perfectly 2026 that data centers now shape our sidewalks.

Open Source Soap Operas And Retro Geek Drama

  • OnlyOffice Drops Nextcloud After Surprise Euro Office Fork

    ONLYOFFICE pulled the plug on its Nextcloud partnership after discovering their code powering a new Euro‑Office suite without a blessing. Legally the AGPL allows it; emotionally, vendors feel used. Commenters are split between “rules are rules” and “congrats, you played yourself.”

  • LibreOffice Foundation Boots Out The People Who Build It

    In a wild move, The Document Foundation dropped many Collabora staff from membership, effectively ejecting core LibreOffice developers from its inner circle. To outsiders it looks like a nonprofit at war with its own brain, and users worry politics will stall the project they rely on.

  • Raspberry Pi Price Hikes Show Hobby Computers Under Siege

    With Raspberry Pi boards creeping toward $300 for top models thanks to DRAM prices, the cheap‑and‑cheerful single board computer scene feels like it’s dying. Hobbyists grumble that a fun weekend project now costs as much as a used laptop, killing the spirit that made these boards huge.

  • Linux Gaming Finally Breaks Through As Steam Share Soars

    Valve’s latest stats show Steam on Linux jumping past 5%, more than double macOS. Between the Steam Deck, Proton, and Windows fatigue, gamers are finally treating Linux as a real option. Old jokes about drivers and broken games suddenly feel like they belong in another decade.

  • Old NASA Engineers Warn We Forgot How To Build

    A reflective essay on NASA’s slide‑rule era argues that we built marvels like Sputnik‑era craft with simple tools and deep know‑how, then outsourced that grit to software and vendors. Readers feel nostalgic but also called out: maybe we’ve gotten dangerously comfortable not understanding the machines we use.

Top Stories

Humans Return To The Moon With Artemis II

Space

NASA’s Artemis II finally put people back on a path to the Moon, launching a crew on a 10‑day loop around it. It’s the first trip beyond low Earth orbit since Apollo, and the clearest sign yet that deep-space crewed missions are back on the table.

Claude Code Leak Shakes Trust In Enterprise AI

AI & Security

A missing config line pushed Claude Code’s entire source map to the public npm registry, exposing how a flagship AI coding tool really works. Regulated companies are now rethinking how safely they can rely on closed, cloud‑hosted AI tools.

AI-Written FreeBSD Hack Shows New Security Nightmare

Cybersecurity

Researchers used Claude to help write a full remote attack against FreeBSD’s core, ending in a root shell. It’s a chilling proof that modern chatbots don’t just help fix bugs – they can also help create very dangerous new ones.

NYC Hospital Boss Ready To Swap Radiologists For AI

Healthcare & AI

The CEO of NYC Health + Hospitals says he’s ready to start replacing some radiologists with AI once regulators allow it. Doctors are rattled, tech folks are skeptical, and everyone can feel that the white‑collar job disruption just got real.

AI Bills You More Depending On Your Language

AI & Business

An analysis of OpenAI, Google and others shows people can pay up to 60% more for the same AI work, just because their language uses more BPE tokens. It feels like a quiet, nerdy form of price discrimination that regular users never agreed to.

SpaceX Quietly Files For Record-Shattering Mega IPO

Business & Space

Reports say SpaceX has confidentially filed to go public at a jaw‑dropping $1.75T valuation. If it happens, it could eclipse nearly every tech IPO in history and lock in Elon Musk’s grip on both Wall Street and low Earth orbit.

Office Suite War Erupts As OnlyOffice Dumps Nextcloud

Open Source & Business

ONLYOFFICE killed its partnership with Nextcloud after the Euro‑Office project forked its code without a green light. It’s a spicy clash over what “open source” really means when millions of paying enterprise users are on the line.

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

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Oracle Axes 30,000 Workers by Dawn Email!

Oracle Axes 30,000 Workers by Dawn Email!

Power Plays, Layoffs, and Privacy Scares Rock Tech

  • Oracle lays off 30k workers by cold dawn email

    Oracle just told around 30,000 people they no longer have jobs with a 6 a.m. email. No calls, no meetings, just a mass message and locked accounts. It feels brutally impersonal, even by big‑tech standards, and has folks wondering who’s safe in the next cost-cutting wave.

  • Italy blocks US war flights from key Sicily base

    Italy quietly refused to let US planes tied to the Iran war use its Sicily air base. The government insists the base isn’t “closed,” but the message is clear: Europe is tired of being a default launchpad for every crisis, and Washington can’t assume automatic support anymore.

  • US waives Gulf wildlife protections for oil industry

    The US invoked “national security” to let oil companies skip key protections for endangered whales, turtles, and dolphins in the Gulf of Mexico. The move lands like a gut punch to people who thought climate and wildlife finally mattered; it feels like the old drill-first playbook is back.

  • White House app sends most of your data elsewhere

    Researchers intercepted traffic from the official White House iOS app and found roughly 77% of requests going to third parties for analytics and tracking. For an app that should be boringly civic, it feels uncomfortably like any other ad-tech product, and that creeps people out.

  • OkCupid feeds millions of faces to AI firm

    The FTC says OkCupid handed over about 3 million user photos to a face-recognition company, with no clear consent, and walks away with a slap on the wrist and no fine. If dating apps already felt invasive, this makes them look like hungry pipelines for training surveillance tech.

AI Gold Rush Meets Growing Backlash and Weird Bugs

  • OpenAI hauls in $122B and fuels AI takeover fears

    OpenAI announced a jaw-dropping $122 billion raise to “accelerate the next phase of AI”. It cements the company as an untouchable giant and has people both dazzled and uneasy, worried this kind of cash makes real competition, transparency, and restraint feel almost impossible.

  • Claude Code’s full source accidentally lands on npm

    Anthropic’s Claude Code CLI, a popular AI coding helper, had its TypeScript source accidentally published to npm. Devs instantly started poking around like it was a leaked movie script, thrilled to learn how the magic works and annoyed that such a slick security slip happened at all.

  • Leaked Claude Code hides fake tools and secret pet

    A deep dive into the leaked Claude Code reveals hidden “fake tools” to steer behavior, secret feature flags, and even a joking virtual pet living in your terminal. It’s funny and clever, but also a reminder that these “smart” assistants are heavily scripted performances, not pure intelligence.

  • Closed AI is blasted as new digital feudalism

    An opinion piece slams closed-source AI as modern “neofeudalism”, where a few labs own the models, the data, and ultimately everyone’s tools. It struck a nerve with people already tired of paywalled models and opaque rules, and it adds more moral heat to the open vs. closed AI debate.

  • Tiny 1-bit AI model promises huge power in your pocket

    PrismML’s 1-Bit Bonsai claims “commercially viable” 1‑bit large language models that shrink memory needs so far they could run on phones and tiny servers. The idea of serious AI on cheap hardware sounds amazing, but people are skeptical until they see it handle real‑world workloads.

Nerd Toys, Retro Hacks, and Wild Side Projects

  • Describe an app, get a ready-made desktop program

    Raincast lets you type what app you want and spits out a native desktop app using AI and open source tools. It feels like science fiction for lazy builders, though folks worry it may encourage low-quality, cookie-cutter software and a new wave of bloatware pretending to be custom apps.

  • MiniStack steps in as free LocalStack replacement

    After LocalStack went paid, devs grumbled. Now MiniStack shows up promising a free local mock of AWS services using real Postgres, Redis, and containers. It hits that sweet spot of sticking it to pricing changes while giving developers a simpler, less naggy tool for cloud-style testing.

  • Browser voxel wizard game charms Hacker News crowd

    Wildmagic is a cute open-world voxel game you can play in the browser, where you’re a secret wizard in the suburbs. It mixes Minecraft‑style vibes with a crafty magic system and one‑time purchase model, and people love that it feels like a passion project, not a loot-box cash grab.

  • Four-dimensional Doom clone melts brains in your browser

    HYPERHELL takes old-school Doom and ramps it into four dimensions using WebGPU. The result is a trippy, confusing shooter that makes your eyes and brain work overtime. It’s absolutely unnecessary, completely delightful, and exactly the kind of nerd flex people show off to their friends.

  • Mad genius makes SQL render and play chess boards

    Someone used plain SQL to draw a chessboard, track pieces, and move them around in a browser. It’s hilariously overcomplicated and practically useless, but the sheer nerd artistry of abusing a database to play chess has people grinning and questioning every “best practices” talk they’ve heard.

Top Stories

Claude Code Source Spills Onto the Open Web

AI & Dev Tools

Anthropic’s flagship coding helper has its TypeScript guts dumped on npm, letting the world peek under the hood of a top-tier AI tool.

Leaked Claude Code Hides Fake Tools and Easter Eggs

AI & Dev Tools

A forensic tour of the leaked code uncovers hidden features, jokey tricks, and safety hacks, showing just how carefully AI assistants are stage-managed.

OpenAI Grabs $122B and Supercharges the AI Arms Race

AI & Business

OpenAI announces an eye-watering $122 billion raise, cementing its role as the most heavily backed AI lab on Earth and fueling fears of runaway consolidation.

Oracle Axes 30k Workers by Dawn Email

Business & Jobs

Tens of thousands wake up to a 6 a.m. layoff message, making Oracle the day’s poster child for cold corporate cost-cutting in big tech.

White House App Sends Most Traffic to Outsiders

Privacy & Politics

A snoop on the official White House app’s network traffic shows over three‑quarters of requests hitting third parties, raising eyebrows over citizen tracking.

US Lets Oil Firms Skip Protecting Gulf Wildlife

Environment & Energy

Washington waves through an exemption letting oil companies dodge key protections for endangered Gulf species, all under the banner of “national security.”

Italy Blocks US War Flights From Sicily Base

Geopolitics & Defense

Rome quietly refuses US use of a key air base for Iran strikes, signaling Europe’s growing discomfort with being a permanent launchpad for conflict.

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

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Copilot Turns Your Code Reviews Into Ads!

Copilot Turns Your Code Reviews Into Ads!

Big Tech Backtracks While Rockets and Routers Wobble

  • Copilot quietly turns your pull requests into ads

    Developers learned that GitHub Copilot had been slipping sponsored “tips” into over 1.5M pull requests, effectively renting out their code reviews as ad space. The mood is furious: people feel used, and see this as the ugly cash‑grab side of AI.

  • GitHub kills Copilot pull request ads after fury

    After a wave of outrage, GitHub and Microsoft scrapped Copilot’s PR ads almost as fast as they shipped them. The climbdown feels like a rare win for developers, but also a warning that every “helpful” AI feature now needs a monetization microscope.

  • Artemis II heat shield slammed as not flight ready

    A long, biting essay argues NASA’s Artemis II crewed mission is being rushed with a heat shield that still behaves unpredictably. The author says engineers are flying blind on key risks, and many readers agree it feels more like a PR race than real safety.

  • Hackers rush to hit critical F5 BIG‑IP bug

    A nasty new flaw in F5 BIG‑IP APM gear is now under active attack, giving intruders a way into high‑value corporate and government networks. Security folks sound exhausted: yet another "patch now or regret later" moment for the internet’s hidden infrastructure.

  • Hijacked axios package drops remote access malware

    The popular axios library on npm was compromised, shipping versions that install a remote‑access trojan on developer machines. People are frustrated that a single poisoned dependency can still ambush so many apps, despite years of supply‑chain wake‑up calls.

AI Agents Swarm the Web and Lab Bench

  • Report says bots now outnumber humans on internet

    A new Human Security report claims AI systems and bots now generate more traffic than real people online. It matches what users see daily: spammy signups, fake clicks, and "content" no human asked for. The sense is clear – the modern web feels increasingly synthetic.

  • Security study warns of out‑of‑control AI agents

    This "Agents of Chaos" piece dissects what happens when LLM‑style agents get tools like code execution and cloud access. The takeaway is grim: once you give these helpers real powers, even small mistakes can snowball into data leaks, outages, or costly mischief.

  • Paper predicts next boom comes from agentic AI

    A new research paper argues the real AI explosion won’t be from bigger chatbots, but from swarms of "agentic" systems that work together, call tools, and adapt. It’s exciting and unnerving: readers see huge upside, but also a future of even harder‑to‑control machines.

  • Ollama taps Apple MLX to speed Mac AI models

    Local‑model favorite Ollama now runs on Apple’s MLX framework for Apple Silicon, promising faster, smoother AI on Mac laptops. The crowd loves anything that cuts cloud dependence, but also grumbles that Apple’s best AI tricks still feel oddly buried on device.

  • Google launches foundation model just for time series

    Google Research unveiled TimesFM, a 200M‑parameter model tuned for forecasting time‑based data like sales and demand. It’s niche but important: people see it as another sign that "general" AI is already splintering into specialized tools for every data stream.

Dating Apps, Day Jobs, and Dead Mac Pros

  • FTC slams OkCupid’s secret data‑sharing deals

    The FTC is going after OkCupid and Match Group, accusing them of quietly handing intimate dating‑profile data to outside partners. Users already distrusted dating apps; seeing regulators call out creepy tracking just confirms the worst suspicions about love‑through‑apps.

  • Washington state outlaws noncompete agreements entirely

    A new Washington law bans noncompete clauses statewide, going further than the FTC’s stalled national effort. Tech workers are thrilled to see one state finally cut the leash, and hope it starts a race for talent freedom instead of employer control.

  • US government apps demand creepier phone permissions

    A deep dive into so‑called Fedware shows official US government apps, like the FBI and disaster tools, hoovering up GPS, fingerprints, and more. People are understandably salty: the same folks banning foreign apps for spying seem very eager to spy themselves.

  • Apple quietly kills the pricey Mac Pro tower

    Apple has stopped selling the M2 Ultra Mac Pro and says no replacement is planned. Pros feel abandoned yet again, stuck between underpowered laptops and sealed iMacs. It reinforces the sense that Apple loves creators’ cash, but not their need for modular hardware.

  • Sony pauses memory cards as AI eats all NAND

    Sony halted orders for its CFexpress and SD cards, blaming a severe NAND flash shortage driven by huge AI data centers. Photographers and video folks are annoyed to be collateral damage in the silicon arms race, watching basic storage become a luxury item.

Top Stories

GitHub Copilot turns code reviews into ad space

Technology

Sparked a global developer backlash by quietly injecting ads into over 1.5 million pull requests, seen as a warning shot for how hard AI tools will be monetized.

GitHub retreats after Copilot ad outrage

Technology

Microsoft-owned GitHub killed the Copilot pull‑request ad feature within days, showing that angry developers still have real power over platform decisions.

Bots now rule more of the web than humans

Technology

Fresh traffic data claims AI and bots now generate the majority of internet activity, confirming what many suspected: the modern web is flooded with non‑human junk.

AI agents move from cute toy to real threat

Technology

New security research warns that tool‑using AI agents can cause real‑world damage when wired into code, clouds, and company data, raising alarm beyond normal chatbot worries.

Whistleblower says NASA’s next moon trip isn’t safe

Science

A detailed critique of NASA’s Artemis II mission argues the Orion capsule’s heat shield is unproven and poorly tested, suggesting the first crewed lunar flyby in decades may be too risky.

F5 zero‑day hole gives hackers keys to big networks

Technology

A critical flaw in widely used F5 BIG‑IP access gear is now under active exploit, putting governments and enterprises at risk and reminding everyone how fragile internet plumbing really is.

Axios npm hack shows how fragile software supply is

Technology

Popular axios JavaScript package was hijacked on npm to drop a remote‑access trojan, another brutal example that one poisoned dependency can silently infect countless apps and companies.

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