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The Redistribution of Housing Wealth Caused by Rent Control [pdf]

https://www.rhawa.org/file/secure/shs-the-impact-of-rent-control-in-st-paul.pdf
1•luu•1m ago•0 comments

Half-Life able to run on ReactOS

https://xcancel.com/reactos/status/2064839936059011207
1•zdw•2m ago•0 comments

Making Claude a Chemist

https://www.anthropic.com/research/making-claude-a-chemist
2•gmays•5m ago•0 comments

Life Evolved

https://github.com/harrisjerico30-dotcom/G4-construct-
1•jericoharris•10m ago•0 comments

Weave: Merging based on language structure and not lines

https://ataraxy-labs.github.io/weave/
1•rohanat•15m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Tabby – sleeps tabs based on RAM pressure, not fixed timers

https://meettabby.netlify.app/
1•justbuilding•18m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Bastion – isolated Linux VMs for background coding agents

https://bastion.computer/
1•almostlit•22m ago•0 comments

Thirty Years My Open Source Project: The ApeSDK/Noble Ape

https://apesdk.com/
1•barbalet•27m ago•1 comments

The Rise of Housing Nationalism in Canada and Transnational Ownership Patterns

https://open.library.ubc.ca/media/stream/pdf/52383/1.0438798/5
1•luu•28m ago•0 comments

I will put a talking persona on your website

https://www.usegoblin.xyz
1•Obi-•28m ago•1 comments

AUR Malware Attack: Do Not Update [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WoxR7fGl4CI
1•kshri24•28m ago•3 comments

Building a serial and VGA "everything console"

http://oldvcr.blogspot.com/2026/06/building-serial-and-vga-everything.html
2•classichasclass•29m ago•0 comments

Quadratic funding democratizes allocation by rewarding projects w/ broad support

https://internetfreedom.torproject.org/funding-distribution/
1•Cider9986•30m ago•0 comments

If your sex life is dead, you can blame Steve Jobs

https://www.theregister.com/personal-tech/2026/06/09/study-links-iphone-rollout-to-decline-in-us-...
2•fallinditch•30m ago•0 comments

Make stolen phones unusable, Met Police urges tech giants

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ckg4dey905yo
1•gnabgib•31m ago•0 comments

Judge re-opens eBay harassment lawsuit after settlement talks break down

https://www.universalhub.com/2026/judge-re-opens-lawsuit-over-way-ebay-terrorized-natick-couple-a...
1•ilamont•36m ago•0 comments

Open-Cowork: open-source alternative to Claude Cowork with BYOK

https://github.com/coasty-ai/open-cowork
1•PrateekJ1703•42m ago•0 comments

Apt Encounters of the Third Kind

https://igor-blue.github.io/2021/03/24/apt1.html
2•ogurechny•43m ago•0 comments

Brew Browser – A Native macOS GUI for Homebrew

https://brew-browser.zerologic.com/
1•jonbaer•44m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Inkwash, a watercolor sketching app and explanation

https://johnowhitaker.github.io/inkwash/about
1•Yenrabbit•46m ago•0 comments

The Australian Town Where More Than Half the Population Lives Underground

https://terralocate.com/interesting/coober-pedy-australia-underground-town
1•thunderbong•50m ago•0 comments

Download Free Marketing Software

https://www.coolmarketingsoftware.com/osclass-submitter/
2•bokeke1•51m ago•0 comments

What Should I Build?

1•gooob•56m ago•0 comments

ClawMoat, runtime containment for AI agents after Fable 5

https://clawmoat.com/
1•ildar•58m ago•0 comments

5.3M-year-old deep-sea whale necropolis in the Diamantina Zone

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-026-10546-z
4•defrost•1h ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Which cheap Chinese LLM are you using?

4•linzhangrun•1h ago•0 comments

GIER: A Danish computer from 1961 with a role in the modern astronomy

https://arxiv.org/abs/1704.05828
1•andrewstuart•1h ago•0 comments

Lime 2.0 – Zero Human Auth for AI Agents

https://lime.pics
1•MawyxxY•1h ago•1 comments

Brew Browser: A Native macOS GUI for Homebrew

https://github.com/msitarzewski/brew-browser
2•amichail•1h ago•1 comments

Vincent's parents 'never say he's good enough' so he turned to a couple online

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cpq3dnr5vlzo
2•breve•1h ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

A Critical Look at "A Critical Look at MCP."

https://docs.mcp.run/blog/2025/05/16/mcp-implenda-est/
33•palmfacehn•1y ago

Comments

nip•1y ago
> Further, one of the issues with remote servers is tenancy

Excellent write-up and understanding of the current state of MCP

I’ve been waiting for someone to point it out. This is in my opinion the biggest limitation of the current spec.

What is needed is a tool invocation context that is provided at tool invocation time.

Such tool invocation context allows passing information that would allow authorizing, authentication but also tracing the original “requester”: think of it as “tool invoked on behalf of user identity”

This of course implies an upstream authnz that feeds these details and more.

If you’re interested in this topic, my email is in my bio: I’m of the architect of our multi-tenant tool calling implementation that we’ve been running in production for the past year with enterprise customers where authnz and auditability are key requirements.

jensneuse•1y ago
The way we've solved this in our MCP gateway (OSS) is that the user first needs to authenticate against our gateway, e.g. by creating a valid JWT with their identity provider, which will be validated using JWKS. Now when they use a tool, they must send their JWT, so the LLM always acts in their behalf. This supports multiple tenants out of the box. (https://wundergraph.com/mcp-gateway)
Yoric•1y ago
Is this really hard to code?

I mean, converting a tool-less LLM into a tool-using LLM is a few hundred lines of code, and then you can plug all your tools, with whichever context you want.

nip•1y ago
Indeed very easy to code!

My point is about the need for a spec of this mechanism: without a spec, every company / org will roll out their own and result in 500 flavors of the same concept.

That’s where MCP shines: tool calling and tool discovery is already 1.5 years old (an eternity in ai land).

The MCP spec ensures that we can all focus on solving problems with tool calling rather than wasting time in cobbling together services that re not interoperable (because developed without a common spec / standard)

__loam•1y ago
This is an advertisement
tomrod•1y ago
I wish this were critical, but it is an ad for MCP.run.
nip•1y ago
It’s both in my opinion and discussions can stem from the linked article

Many come to HN also for the comments

palmfacehn•1y ago
Personally, I'm not a fan. I thought the proponent's view might stimulate a discussion.
FunnyLookinHat•1y ago
> Server authors working on large systems likely already have an OAuth 2.0 API.

I think this biases towards sufficiently large engineering organizations where OAuth 2.0 was identified as necessary for some part of their requirements. In most organizations, they're still using `x-<orgname>-token` headers and the like to do auth.

I'm not sure that there's a better / easier way to do Auth with this use case, but it does present a signficant hurdle to adoption for those who have an API (even one ready for JSON-RPC!) that is practically ready to be exposed via MCP.

motorest•1y ago
> I think this biases towards sufficiently large engineering organizations where OAuth 2.0 was identified as necessary for some part of their requirements. In most organizations, they're still using `x-<orgname>-token` headers and the like to do auth.

I don't think that's it. Auth is a critical system in any organization, and larger organizations actually present more resistance to change, particularly in business critical areas. If anything, smaller orgs gave an easier time migrating critical systems such as authentication.

hirsin•1y ago
Touching on tenancy and the "real" gaps in the spec does help push the discussion in a useful direction.

https://vulnerablemcp.info/ is a good collection of the immediately obvious issues with the MCP protocol that need to be addressed. A couple low blows in there, that feel a bit motivated to make MCP look worse, but generally a good starting point overall.

owebmaster•1y ago
This post has too many "shameless plugs" to be taken seriously.
smitty1e•1y ago
Serious question:

If doing an extended, service-level session (like a GPT interaction) with a server known beforehand, would it make sense to set up a keypair and manage the interaction over SSH?

Restated: are we throwing away a lot of bandwidth establishing TLS trust for the more general HTTP?