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  1. Bucketsquatting is (finally) dead from onecloudplease.com
    147 by boyter 4h ago | |

    Discussion (63):

    Comment analysis in progress.

  2. I traced $2B in grants and 45 states' lobbying behind age‑verification bills from old.reddit.com
    270 by shaicoleman 2h ago | |

    Discussion (81):

    Comment analysis in progress.

  3. Prompt-caching – auto-injects Anthropic cache breakpoints (90% token savings) from prompt-caching.ai
    22 by ermis 1h ago | |

    Discussion (10):

    Comment analysis in progress.

  4. TUI Studio – visual terminal UI design tool from tui.studio
    36 by mipselaer 2h ago | |

    Discussion (14):

    Comment analysis in progress.

  5. Willingness to look stupid from sharif.io
    435 by Samin100 4d ago | |

    Article: 15 min

    The article discusses how a fear of looking stupid can hinder creative work and proposes strategies to overcome this fear.

    • Fame can sterilize creativity by setting high expectations for every piece of work.
    • Young, unproven individuals are more likely to produce creative ideas due to less fear of failure or looking foolish.
    • Aadil's Law suggests that a willingness to look stupid is directly proportional to the quality of ideas produced.
    Quality:
    The article presents an opinion-based argument with a personal narrative, aiming to inspire readers rather than provide factual information.

    Discussion (152):

    Comment analysis in progress.

    Art Creative Process, Personal Development
  6. Executing programs inside transformers with exponentially faster inference from percepta.ai
    157 by u1hcw9nx 1d ago | | |

    Discussion (40):

    The discussion centers around an innovative approach to interpretability in models, with a focus on integrating tools into the main computation path and memory implementation. While there are differing opinions, particularly regarding system comprehension without execution, the overall sentiment is positive.

    • A new path for interpretability
    Counterarguments:
    • Statements about system comprehension without execution
  7. Source code of Swedish e-government services has been leaked from darkwebinformer.com
    102 by tavro 3h ago | |

    Discussion (74):

    Comment analysis in progress.

  8. Okmain: How to pick an OK main colour of an image from dgroshev.com
    46 by dgroshev 3d ago | |

    Discussion (6):

    Comment analysis in progress.

  9. Malus – Clean Room as a Service from malus.sh
    1320 by microflash 23h ago | | |

    Article: 9 min

    Malus - Clean Room as a Service is an AI-driven platform that recreates proprietary software from open-source dependencies without copying or inheriting licenses, allowing companies to liberate their codebase and choose corporate-friendly licenses.

    This service could significantly impact open-source communities by potentially reducing attribution to maintainers and altering the dynamics of software licensing in corporate environments.
    • AI-powered clean room process
    • Avoids attribution and obligations to original maintainers
    • Functionally equivalent output with proprietary license
    Quality:
    The article provides clear information on the service and its benefits, with a focus on technical details.

    Discussion (479): 1 hr 32 min

    The comment thread discusses a satire about a hypothetical service that provides clean-room reimplementation and license laundering for open-source projects, highlighting the implications of AI on intellectual property rights and the future of software ecosystems.

    • The service described in the satire thread is a form of 'License Laundering as a Service'.
    • There's a debate on whether such services could exist and their implications for open-source ecosystems.
    Counterarguments:
    • Some argue that the service is satire or a warning about potential future scenarios in technology and law.
    • Others suggest that such services could exist given advancements in AI, but question their ethics and legality.
    Software Development AI & Machine Learning, Open Source, Legal Compliance
  10. Show HN: What was the world listening to? Music charts, 20 countries (1940–2025) from 88mph.fm
    22 by matteocantiello 2d ago | |

    Discussion (8):

    Comment analysis in progress.

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In the past 13d 22h 45m, we processed 2732 new articles and 111811 comments with an estimated reading time savings of 50d 22h 44m

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