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Fibonacci Number Certificates

https://www.johndcook.com/blog/2026/02/05/fibonacci-certificate/
1•y1n0•41s ago•0 comments

AI Overviews are killing the web search, and there's nothing we can do about it

https://www.neowin.net/editorials/ai-overviews-are-killing-the-web-search-and-theres-nothing-we-c...
2•bundie•5m ago•0 comments

City skylines need an upgrade in the face of climate stress

https://theconversation.com/city-skylines-need-an-upgrade-in-the-face-of-climate-stress-267763
3•gnabgib•6m ago•0 comments

1979: The Model World of Robert Symes [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HmDxmxhrGDc
1•xqcgrek2•11m ago•0 comments

Satellites Have a Lot of Room

https://www.johndcook.com/blog/2026/02/02/satellites-have-a-lot-of-room/
2•y1n0•11m ago•0 comments

1980s Farm Crisis

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1980s_farm_crisis
3•calebhwin•12m ago•1 comments

Show HN: FSID - Identifier for files and directories (like ISBN for Books)

https://github.com/skorotkiewicz/fsid
1•modinfo•17m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Holy Grail: Open-Source Autonomous Development Agent

https://github.com/dakotalock/holygrailopensource
1•Moriarty2026•24m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Minecraft Creeper meets 90s Tamagotchi

https://github.com/danielbrendel/krepagotchi-game
1•foxiel•31m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Termiteam – Control center for multiple AI agent terminals

https://github.com/NetanelBaruch/termiteam
1•Netanelbaruch•31m ago•0 comments

The only U.S. particle collider shuts down

https://www.sciencenews.org/article/particle-collider-shuts-down-brookhaven
2•rolph•34m ago•1 comments

Ask HN: Why do purchased B2B email lists still have such poor deliverability?

1•solarisos•35m ago•2 comments

Show HN: Remotion directory (videos and prompts)

https://www.remotion.directory/
1•rokbenko•36m ago•0 comments

Portable C Compiler

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portable_C_Compiler
2•guerrilla•39m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Kokki – A "Dual-Core" System Prompt to Reduce LLM Hallucinations

1•Ginsabo•39m ago•0 comments

Software Engineering Transformation 2026

https://mfranc.com/blog/ai-2026/
1•michal-franc•40m ago•0 comments

Microsoft purges Win11 printer drivers, devices on borrowed time

https://www.tomshardware.com/peripherals/printers/microsoft-stops-distrubitng-legacy-v3-and-v4-pr...
3•rolph•41m ago•1 comments

Lunch with the FT: Tarek Mansour

https://www.ft.com/content/a4cebf4c-c26c-48bb-82c8-5701d8256282
2•hhs•44m ago•0 comments

Old Mexico and her lost provinces (1883)

https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/77881/pg77881-images.html
1•petethomas•47m ago•0 comments

'AI' is a dick move, redux

https://www.baldurbjarnason.com/notes/2026/note-on-debating-llm-fans/
5•cratermoon•49m ago•0 comments

The source code was the moat. But not anymore

https://philipotoole.com/the-source-code-was-the-moat-no-longer/
1•otoolep•49m ago•0 comments

Does anyone else feel like their inbox has become their job?

1•cfata•49m ago•1 comments

An AI model that can read and diagnose a brain MRI in seconds

https://www.michiganmedicine.org/health-lab/ai-model-can-read-and-diagnose-brain-mri-seconds
2•hhs•52m ago•0 comments

Dev with 5 of experience switched to Rails, what should I be careful about?

2•vampiregrey•54m ago•0 comments

AlphaFace: High Fidelity and Real-Time Face Swapper Robust to Facial Pose

https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.16429
1•PaulHoule•55m ago•0 comments

Scientists discover “levitating” time crystals that you can hold in your hand

https://www.nyu.edu/about/news-publications/news/2026/february/scientists-discover--levitating--t...
3•hhs•57m ago•0 comments

Rammstein – Deutschland (C64 Cover, Real SID, 8-bit – 2019) [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3VReIuv1GFo
1•erickhill•58m ago•0 comments

Tell HN: Yet Another Round of Zendesk Spam

5•Philpax•58m ago•1 comments

Postgres Message Queue (PGMQ)

https://github.com/pgmq/pgmq
1•Lwrless•1h ago•0 comments

Show HN: Django-rclone: Database and media backups for Django, powered by rclone

https://github.com/kjnez/django-rclone
2•cui•1h ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

Finding Dead Websites

https://www.marginalia.nu/log/a_122_dead_websites/
121•ingve•7mo ago

Comments

55555•7mo ago
It's a real edge case, but someone could conceivably let their own domain expire and then register it anew and restore their website. It will be impossible to tell this apart from an SEO buying and restoring a website to use for link juice.
AznHisoka•7mo ago
The DNS records would be completely revamped, or removed in that case.
marginalia_nu•7mo ago
Yeah there's no shortage of caveats in this space. One could conceivably compare the outgoing links (being a search engine and all and having historical crawl data to compare against), but my hunch the cost of distinguishing between these two cases is going to be way out of proportion when compared to the benefit.
atribecalledqst•7mo ago
Before I RTFA, I was wondering if this would be about trying to find a way to include Wayback Machine results in search. Searching the Wayback Machine is always such a nightmare, and wouldn't it be nice if your search turned up that long-dead 1997 web page that has the exact answer for what you're looking for...

(minor use case I had recently was I was trying to find old Japanese blogs for Tamagotchis, which I gather there were a ton of in the 90s but almost none survive today - imagine if I could get those instead of the 1,000,000 sites just trying to sell them to me)

Lammy•7mo ago
Kagi has this feature, “Blast From The Past” https://blog.kagi.com/kagi-features#:~:text=Interesting%20fi...
marginalia_nu•7mo ago
They're likely only serving previously accessible domains already in their index as wayback machine links, which is neat, but doesn't really solve the problem of indexing the wayback machine in a broader sense.

Would be a very nice feature to have indeed, though the data is a bit too inaccessible to index as far as I can tell (even though I've not given it any serious effort, so maybe it is?)

Lammy•7mo ago
I kinda consider that a feature and not a bug. If it were easier to find all the really deep stuff in the Wayback Machine, people would be trying to censor it all the time. I like being able to spear-fish my way into the deep shit by finding layers of URI references in other archived pages.
cosmicgadget•7mo ago
Agreed, it'd be neat to test links on the fly and substitute wayback links if they are dead and cached information if there is no snapshot.
guestbest•7mo ago
The Usenet was considered a better place to store data about a topic for a year than a website because the interactive format allowed other people to comment. There was only cgi guestbooks which pale in comparison to a newsreader. People didn’t think back then about keeping information around forever because books were still the primary way information was captured, retained and transferred
pabs3•7mo ago
Would be great if Marginalia would be feeding crawl data to the Wayback Machine too.
GJim•7mo ago
> 1,000,000 sites just trying to sell

Welcome to the modern internet.

l5870uoo9y•7mo ago
What a pleasant website theme for reading.
mlhpdx•7mo ago
I’m not sure what the authors point was with respect to ASN 16509. Are they saying parked domains don’t like being viewed by Amazon IPs or that moving to Amazon is a strong signal for being parked? The latter seems absurd. But is it?
marginalia_nu•7mo ago
It seems an especially strong signal along with the other signals, i.e. ok status + losing encryption.

The entire game is combining a bunch of weak indicators into a strong one.

koprocezar•7mo ago
That was interesting.
renegat0x0•7mo ago
Whoa, this is what I have been wondering for some time, for my crawler.

Crawler results depend on domain authority. If page owner, or page contents page change the ranking may, or should change.

However original author also could change contents, and page ranking should not be changed. So this is not easy to determine what to do with domain of it becomes inactive, or changes contents dramatically.

Currently I use only 30 day window to keep track of domains. After that period inactive domain is thrown out of the window.

However valuable domains, even if dead, reside longer. My UI provides easy link to wayback machine. So even for dead links I can browse them.

I noticed also that some domains, even if expired do serve contents, even if author left it alone. Page contents is served, but with a text that it expired.

JdeBP•7mo ago
As someone with a WWW site hit by Brexit where half the country voted to stop me having my domain name (and some other things) I read this with interest to consider how badly it would be caught out on the sort of false positive where a WWW site owner has to change ASes, change HTTP servers, set up redirects and meta information for the time left before eu. becomes unavailable, and even change DNS servers let alone a number of resource records. A lot of those seem to be things that will add up in this model. As would the fact that my prior domain name is today parked. In Canada!

Not the first sudden and unwelcome discontinuity, either.

Google came close to thinking that I was dead, and turned out when I recently checked to be still looking for me under eu., years after the fact.

And with a broader view, this sort of stuff happens to the world, and there are enough people in the same boat that it is worth thinking of false positives when major upheavals occur. They can range from ISPs just up and deciding to close up shop with zero notice (which also happened to me) to international geopolitical upheavals. Who knows! If Brexit happened, it is conceivable that one day, the island of Niue might eventually prevail and then decide overnight that non-Niue citizens may not own a nu. domain. (-:

I wonder how many times Marginalia would have declared me dead, by now. (-:

marginalia_nu•7mo ago
I think some degree of false positives is inevitable with this type of feature, but it can still provide use even if it's not perfect. Websites with flakey profiles that keep changing emit a signal of their own.
zinekeller•7mo ago
The TLS verifier workaround that you've constructed is reasonably sound (based on how TLS validation works in browsers), but the boring answer to workaround certificate problems is to do what Firefox actually does: skip AIA and only rely on known intermediates. You can import Mozilla's intermediate list as roots (https://wiki.mozilla.org/CA/Intermediate_Certificates, requires additional processing to convert to usable certs) to emulate this.

Chrome on the other hand... just read this article (https://blog.benjojo.co.uk/post/browsers-biggest-tls-mistake), it's very hard to emulate and is really, really bonkers.

marginalia_nu•7mo ago
Haha, so this rabbit hole keeps getting somehow even worse. I do not envy anyone attempting to implement browser-compatible TLS with actual security in mind.
tart-lemonade•7mo ago
> While the change detection currently only runs on a subset of about 2 million domains, the crawler is aware of approximately 36,000,000 domains in total, and about 1,500,000 of those are subdomains of tumblr.com.

So Tumblr makes up ~4% of all internet domains (or at least, all linked publicly-accessible domains)? Makes sense, but still wild to think about. I'd love to know what the top 10 domains (by sub-domain count) are.

marginalia_nu•7mo ago
Here's top 25 as far as marginalia's domain awareness goes

  +---------+------------------+
  | CNT     | DOMAIN_TOP       |
  +---------+------------------+
  | 2445090 | tumblr.com       |
  |  915418 | blogspot.com     |
  |  712132 | wordpress.com    |
  |  244369 | bandcamp.com     |
  |  236676 | uptodown.com     |
  |  115058 | github.io        |
  |   99616 | substack.com     |
  |   83419 | deviantart.com   |
  |   78243 | livejournal.com  |
  |   73866 | weebly.com       |
  |   71687 | wixsite.com      |
  |   68073 | informer.com     |
  |   67849 | medium.com       |
  |   65004 | knoji.com        |
  |   59438 | blogspot.co.uk   |
  |   59412 | list-manage.com  |
  |   41923 | itch.io          |
  |   41150 | mystrikingly.com |
  |   40743 | ibooked.dk       |
  |   39978 | fnxradio.com     |
  |   35671 | blogspot.ca      |
  |   34450 | site123.me       |
  |   33889 | ibooked.nl       |
  |   33649 | xuijs.com        |
  |   30391 | infospaceinc.com |
  +---------+------------------+