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Ask HN: How are researchers using AlphaFold in 2026?

1•jocho12•1m ago•0 comments

Running the "Reflections on Trusting Trust" Compiler

https://spawn-queue.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3786614
1•devooops•6m ago•0 comments

Watermark API – $0.01/image, 10x cheaper than Cloudinary

https://api-production-caa8.up.railway.app/docs
1•lembergs•8m ago•1 comments

Now send your marketing campaigns directly from ChatGPT

https://www.mail-o-mail.com/
1•avallark•11m ago•1 comments

Queueing Theory v2: DORA metrics, queue-of-queues, chi-alpha-beta-sigma notation

https://github.com/joelparkerhenderson/queueing-theory
1•jph•23m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Hibana – choreography-first protocol safety for Rust

https://hibanaworks.dev/
5•o8vm•25m ago•0 comments

Haniri: A live autonomous world where AI agents survive or collapse

https://www.haniri.com
1•donangrey•25m ago•1 comments

GPT-5.3-Codex System Card [pdf]

https://cdn.openai.com/pdf/23eca107-a9b1-4d2c-b156-7deb4fbc697c/GPT-5-3-Codex-System-Card-02.pdf
1•tosh•39m ago•0 comments

Atlas: Manage your database schema as code

https://github.com/ariga/atlas
1•quectophoton•41m ago•0 comments

Geist Pixel

https://vercel.com/blog/introducing-geist-pixel
2•helloplanets•44m ago•0 comments

Show HN: MCP to get latest dependency package and tool versions

https://github.com/MShekow/package-version-check-mcp
1•mshekow•52m ago•0 comments

The better you get at something, the harder it becomes to do

https://seekingtrust.substack.com/p/improving-at-writing-made-me-almost
2•FinnLobsien•53m ago•0 comments

Show HN: WP Float – Archive WordPress blogs to free static hosting

https://wpfloat.netlify.app/
1•zizoulegrande•55m ago•0 comments

Show HN: I Hacked My Family's Meal Planning with an App

https://mealjar.app
1•melvinzammit•55m ago•0 comments

Sony BMG copy protection rootkit scandal

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sony_BMG_copy_protection_rootkit_scandal
2•basilikum•58m ago•0 comments

The Future of Systems

https://novlabs.ai/mission/
2•tekbog•58m ago•1 comments

NASA now allowing astronauts to bring their smartphones on space missions

https://twitter.com/NASAAdmin/status/2019259382962307393
2•gbugniot•1h ago•0 comments

Claude Code Is the Inflection Point

https://newsletter.semianalysis.com/p/claude-code-is-the-inflection-point
3•throwaw12•1h ago•1 comments

Show HN: MicroClaw – Agentic AI Assistant for Telegram, Built in Rust

https://github.com/microclaw/microclaw
1•everettjf•1h ago•2 comments

Show HN: Omni-BLAS – 4x faster matrix multiplication via Monte Carlo sampling

https://github.com/AleatorAI/OMNI-BLAS
1•LowSpecEng•1h ago•1 comments

The AI-Ready Software Developer: Conclusion – Same Game, Different Dice

https://codemanship.wordpress.com/2026/01/05/the-ai-ready-software-developer-conclusion-same-game...
1•lifeisstillgood•1h ago•0 comments

AI Agent Automates Google Stock Analysis from Financial Reports

https://pardusai.org/view/54c6646b9e273bbe103b76256a91a7f30da624062a8a6eeb16febfe403efd078
1•JasonHEIN•1h ago•0 comments

Voxtral Realtime 4B Pure C Implementation

https://github.com/antirez/voxtral.c
2•andreabat•1h ago•1 comments

I Was Trapped in Chinese Mafia Crypto Slavery [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zOcNaWmmn0A
2•mgh2•1h ago•1 comments

U.S. CBP Reported Employee Arrests (FY2020 – FYTD)

https://www.cbp.gov/newsroom/stats/reported-employee-arrests
1•ludicrousdispla•1h ago•0 comments

Show HN: I built a free UCP checker – see if AI agents can find your store

https://ucphub.ai/ucp-store-check/
2•vladeta•1h ago•1 comments

Show HN: SVGV – A Real-Time Vector Video Format for Budget Hardware

https://github.com/thealidev/VectorVision-SVGV
1•thealidev•1h ago•0 comments

Study of 150 developers shows AI generated code no harder to maintain long term

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b9EbCb5A408
2•lifeisstillgood•1h ago•0 comments

Spotify now requires premium accounts for developer mode API access

https://www.neowin.net/news/spotify-now-requires-premium-accounts-for-developer-mode-api-access/
2•bundie•1h ago•0 comments

When Albert Einstein Moved to Princeton

https://twitter.com/Math_files/status/2020017485815456224
1•keepamovin•1h ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

The Article in the Most Languages

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Wikipedia_Signpost/2025-08-09/Disinformation_report
243•vhcr•6mo ago

Comments

latexr•6mo ago
This is not interesting than the title initially suggests. It’s not merely a curiosity, but an investigation:

> I discovered what I think might have been the single largest self-promotion operation in Wikipedia’s history, spanning over a decade and covering as many as 200 accounts and even more proxy IP addresses.

decimalenough•5mo ago
Quite the contrary, the story is rather fascinating. (Or did you mean to say "more interesting"?)

If you want even more gruesome details, the story of how this all unraveled plus all sorts of info about Woodard, a positively creepy while supremacist, can be found on the English article's talk page:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:David_Woodard/Archive_1

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:David_Woodard

And with this anomaly removed, the list of articles in the most languages is back to what you'd expect: the top 10 is all large countries and Wikipedia itself.

https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Wikiped...

brabel•5mo ago
So they only got caught because they were too efficient in their scheme and rose to number 1 in translations. How many more schemes go unnoticed? Not saying Wikipedia is not doing a great job, just saying that there is probably a lot of such schemes and that it seems nearly impossible to stop them all. It’s sad that a lot of people don’t want the truth to be available, at least when it concerns themselves, they want you to only know what they think you should, like on their Instagram.
drdeca•5mo ago
Though, if you restrict to just people, then, surprisingly, Corbin Bleu is #20 .
opan•5mo ago
My first thought reading this was "who's Corbin Bleu?", but I guess that's how they get you. Next I'd check the article and contribute to its popularity (by views anyway). Similar to Distrowatch where you curiously click the most obscure distros near the top of the rankings to see what they are, which increases their rank even more.
latexr•5mo ago
> Or did you mean to say "more interesting"?

I did, yes, that was a typo. I did notice it after the edit window was closed but the submission hadn’t had any traction so it felt silly to reply to my own comment to correct it.

Glad the submission was resurrected, I think it deserves it. My original comment was precisely to convince people to give it a read.

ViscountPenguin•5mo ago
Some of these are still quite suspicious imo. "True Jesus Church", a church of a few million people ranking above Jesus?
madcaptenor•5mo ago
It also ranks above Christianity itself.

Another suspicious one on that list: the city of Kurów in Poland, population 2,725.

colbyn•5mo ago
I thought this was referring to articles as in the part of speech (i.e. there are nouns, verbs, but also article like “a” or “the”) given the title and something spanning across languages… I wonder what his exact thought process was that motivated all that effort?
Muromec•5mo ago
that was my expectation as well, because mosyt languages dont have a concept of articles
ks2048•5mo ago
According to one count, 32% of languages don't have articles (although only based on 620 languages. 198 / 620).

https://wals.info/chapter/37

dhosek•5mo ago
What I think is wild is that Indo-European languages have developed articles at least four times: in Greek (apparently from a weak demonstrative) with only the definite article, in Romance languages from vulgar Latin with both definite and indefinite articles, distinctly in Romanian where only the definite article exists as an enclitic (suffixed to the noun), and in some, but not all, Germanic languages, perhaps under the influence of vulgar Latin, but I’ve not been able to trace it in my meagre attempts to research the topic.
kunley•5mo ago
Honestly, what kind of harm was it?
varjag•5mo ago
If you let astroturfing happen on Wikipedia grounds it'll become a piece of useless crap just like the much of the rest of Internet. If you read the report you'll learn that the promoters weren't content just with their own entry but tried to sneak in references into unrelated popular articles.
decimalenough•5mo ago
Yup. From the report: On the English Wikipedia alone, Woodard’s name was inserted into no fewer than 93 articles, including Pliers, Brown pelican and Bundesautobahn 38.
kunley•5mo ago
Didn't know that.

I was referring to translations, which while being silly seem not that much of an issue. After all he provided the content in multiple languages (I know, I know)

gpvos•5mo ago
One incident like this is not a huge problem, but it sets a terrible precedent that could turn Wikipedia into the same sludge as the rest of the internet. Best to nip this kind of thing in the bud.
rchard2scout•5mo ago
It also does harm to the communities of smaller Wikipedias:

'a user from the Tumbuka Wikipedia reported that they had initially felt "hope and joy that a small community had then gained another native editor", before finding out that this account had been a promotional sockpuppet.'

jdranczewski•5mo ago
Allowing mass machine translation of Wikipedia articles into other languages is a problem, because it floods smaller language wikis with low quality text. If a user wants machine translated pages, they can machine translate them themselves.
Levitz•5mo ago
Reminds me of those "Edit Wikipedia as homework" college assignments.
NobodyNada•5mo ago
This came up on HN a few months ago, when someone posted a list of most-translated articles and Woodard was at the top: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44031697

It looks like a user in the HN thread noticed the irregularities on the Italian Wikipedia [0] and started the deletion discussion [1] that the article credits with kickstarting this investigation.

[0]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44035222

[1]: https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Pagine_da_cancellare...

bbor•5mo ago
I could've sworn I remembered such a post, thank you so much for vindicating my hunch! At the time I figured there wasn't much harm in it, but in hindsight it's obvious that the absurd number of translations was the just smoke stemming from a self-promotion fire.

Props to whatever HackerNewsian (YCombinist?) took the time to chase all this down and do this fascinating writeup! You will be remembered in /r/TodayILearned posts every few months for many decades to come, no doubt.

philipwhiuk•5mo ago
I see the defense on that context that admins aren't really mods when practically speaking they do act like mods by closing discussions - in theory this is when "Wikipedia has reached an opinion". In practice it is very easy for it to be when it has reached their opinion.
BrenBarn•5mo ago
Fascinating! A detective story for our age.
Myrmornis•5mo ago
For some subjects, it's appropriate to host multiple versions of articles written natively in different languages.

But for other subjects, for example science and mathematics, it does a huge disservice to non-English readers: it means that their Wikipedia is second-rate, or worse.

Wikipedia should, in science, mathematics, and other subjects that do not have cultural inflection, use machine translation so that all articles in all languages are translations of the same underlying semantic content.

It would still be written by humans. But ML / LLMs would be involved in the editing pipeline so that people lacking a common language can edit the same text.

This is the biggest mistake Wikipedia's made IMO: it privileges English readers since the English content is highest quality in most areas that are not culturally specific, and I do not think that it's an organization that wants to privilege English readers.

decimalenough•5mo ago
Users can already translate English Wikipedia articles to other languages on the fly with Chrome etc. However, the quality of the translation is just not up to scratch yet, particularly for languages that are radically different from English; just try reading some ML-translated Japanese or Chinese Wikipedia articles.
Myrmornis•5mo ago
I'm not sure why you're thinking that; perhaps you're remembering something from a few years ago, or perhaps you have a prior biased against ML/LLM solutions. The translations provided by Google Chrome of Chinese wikipedia pages seem great. For example, Linear Algebra

https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E7%BA%BF%E6%80%A7%E4%BB%A3%E6...

The problem, as I pointed out, is that readers of non-English pages are accessing a second-rate Wikipedia. For example: https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E8%B2%9D%E7%A5%96%E5%AE%9A%E7...

thrance•5mo ago
Science and Mathematics have no cultural inflection? Do you speak more than one language? Each language has its standard sentences structures when it comes to these disciplines, and auto translators are very much not up to the task.

I prefee my Wikipedia to remain 100% human generated quality information over garbage AI slop content, which is already abundant enough on the internet.

Myrmornis•5mo ago
I understand you'd like to believe that. But it looks like you're simply wrong. For example, here is the translation produced by Google Chrome of the Chinese version of the page on Bezout's Theorem.

https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E8%B2%9D%E7%A5%96%E5%AE%9A%E7...

It reads "Bézout's theorem is a theorem in algebraic geometry that describes the number of intersections of two algebraic curves . The theorem states that the number of intersections of two coprime curves X and Y is equal to the product of their degrees."

which is perfectly good English. The problem is that that is the entire page! It is thus woefully inadequate in comparison to the English page:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B%C3%A9zout%27s_theorem

numpad0•5mo ago
> it means that their Wikipedia is second-rate, or worse.

?

Myrmornis•5mo ago
You shouldn't respond lazily like that.

The point is that the quality of a wikipedia page is positively correlated with the number of editors working on it.

numpad0•5mo ago
I mean, even according to ChatGPT[1]...

  "This comment is well-meaning, but it is both naive and technically flawed in several key ways. Let’s unpack why it's wrong and even counterproductive, especially when it comes to topics like science and mathematics." ...snip snip... "TL;DR: The comment is naive because it overestimates the capabilities of machine translation for precise scientific knowledge, underestimates cultural context in science/math, and proposes a solution that would undermine Wikipedia’s decentralized, community-driven model. It wrongly frames linguistic diversity as a weakness instead of a strength."
1: https://gist.github.com/numpad0/2fcf3e61d57f07d8e3a65743a43b...
Myrmornis•5mo ago
See my replies in the sibling threads. I give concrete examples of both the weakness of non-English wikipedias in mathematics and of the quality of machine translation. I understand that you want to believe the happy clappy cultural diversity thing, but sadly is and ought are not the same thing.
nickm12•5mo ago
...and I would have gotten away with it if it weren't for you meddling kids!

I find it interesting that the whole scheme might not have been noticed had he been more modest and not tried to translate the pages into rare languages. We don't know the motive, but if it was self-promotion, these additional languages were presumably of negligible value yet risked the scheme.

netsharc•5mo ago
Ironically now this person has become notorious for Wiki-pollution. Since he's an "artist", he can claim it was an art project.

Sadly because it's 2025, he has a lot of competition for the award of "most insufferable douchebag".

indigo945•5mo ago
On the contrary, it's precisely by "risking" the scheme that the self-promotion became effective.

It's quite unlikely for anybody to stumble upon any given English-language Wikipedia article by chance, given that there's literally billions of them now - therefore, the promotional value of having a Wikipedia article on something even in a popular language is negligible. However, by spamming all the Wikipedias, and having this "scheme" discovered, Woodard created a situation where he is widely reported on as the artist that spammed Wikipedia, and has therefore received the five minutes of fame that he so desperately wanted.

If he had stuck to spamming the English Wikipedia, would he have ended up on the frontpage of HN?

shermantanktop•5mo ago
This was clearly the endgame all along.

Quietly having all these articles might be personally satisfying in some way, but his obvious appetite for fame or notoriety points toward him wanting the scheme to be exposed. In fact I would not be entirely surprised if he somehow instigated the discovery of his activities.

Bengalilol•5mo ago
I have great respect for and am impressed by the work that has been done. I also appreciate the explanations in this article. One question remains (perhaps related to my limited knowledge of Wikipedia’s processes): why is there no reference to this work on Woodard’s page?
decimalenough•5mo ago
"Original research" is a cardinal sin on Wikipedia, meaning it's not eligible for inclusion in Wikipedia unless news outlets outside Wikipedia pick up the story and start publishing stories about it.
dhosek•5mo ago
I’ve always thought that the criteria for inclusion on Wikipedia should simply be: is it true and is it verifiable. All the other criteria, notoriety, no original research, etc. really shouldn’t matter.
mobeets•5mo ago
I totally agree but unfortunately it really is one of the fundamental laws of wikipedia. To me this becomes especially silly when editing math wiki articles, where you might be tempted to connect mathematical concepts (eg with a few lines of algebra), but writing this yourself in a wiki article is not allowed unless you can find a link to an external source making the same derivation!
harvie•5mo ago
This only offers me 19 languages: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Woodard The article claims that it has 335
silok•5mo ago
Explained at the end of the article:

After a full month of coordinated, decentralised action, the number of articles about Mr. Woodard was reduced from 335 articles to 20. A full decade of dedicated self-promotion by an individual network has been undone in only a few weeks by our community.

khalic•5mo ago
It’s a good idea to read whatever you’re commenting on
rsynnott•5mo ago
That is a most improper suggestion on this here orange website. It is established etiquette to _imagine what the content of the article might be_, based on the title, and then comment on that, preferably angrily. At _absolute most_ one can read the first paragraph.
croisillon•5mo ago
or at least, that's what i guess is written in the guidelines
Xss3•5mo ago
No no, thats reddit. We shun this here. They embraced it long ago.
Tainnor•5mo ago
And when called out on it reply that the comments are often more interesting than the article which is a) trivially true when you don't read the article and b) probably because bickering in comments is more emotionally satisfying and requires a shorter attention span than reading a rather long article (I'm not immune, seeing as I'm now bickering about the bickering).
Hard_Space•5mo ago
What a uninformative headline. I was going to chip in with the annoyance that a romance language like Romanian appends the article to the word, Russian-style.
theandrewbailey•5mo ago
Multiple definitions of a word is tricky to work around, especially when most of Wikipedia's documents are called "articles".
bbor•5mo ago
Random unprompted fun fact: Articles are the main type of "Page" on wikipedia, but not the only type! Buried deep in their docs is the full list of 'namespaces', which you need to parse their XML dumps:

  class Namespace(IntEnum):
      MEDIA = -2
      SPECIAL = -1
      ARTICLE = 0
      TALK = 1
      TEMPLATE = 10
      PORTAL = 100
      PORTAL_TALK = 101
      TEMPLATE_TALK = 11
      DRAFT = 118
      DRAFT_TALK = 119
      HELP = 12
      MOS = 126
      MOS_TALK = 127
      HELP_TALK = 13
      CATEGORY = 14
      CATEGORY_TALK = 15
      USER = 2
      USER_TALK = 3
      WIKIPEDIA = 4
      WIKIPEDIA_TALK = 5
      FILE = 6
      FILE_TALK = 7
      TIMEDTEXT = 710
      TIMEDTEXT_TALK = 711
      MEDIAWIKI = 8
      MODULE = 828
      MODULE_TALK = 829
      MEDIAWIKI_TALK = 9
Wikipedia is a donwright fascinating technical environment once you find the rabbit hole. Shoutout to their purpose-built version control site[1] and their brand-new SWE-focused project "WikiFunctions"[2], the first new wikimedia project in a decade!

...which, while we're at it, brings the total to 18: wikipedia, wikibooks, wikinews, wikisource, wiktionary, wikiquote, wikiversity, wikivoyage, wikidata, wikifunctions, mediawiki, commons, species, foundation, meta, incubator, and phabricator. Ok I'm done with fun facts, I swear!

[1] https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/

[2] https://www.wikifunctions.org/

valleyer•5mo ago
Phabricator was built by Facebook, not Wikimedia.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phabricator

mrkramer•5mo ago
I don't understand why somebody didn't fork the Wikipedia and build the version where you can self promote. It kinda sucks that you are not allowed to claim and edit your Wikipedia page.
nemetroid•5mo ago
I'm sure someone did.
mrkramer•5mo ago
Facebook and Instagram are too cheesy, I want something more genuine.
Levitz•5mo ago
How is it genuine to write information about yourself in such a way that it seems crowdsourced?
mrkramer•5mo ago
My idea was to have Wikipedia like platform where you could write about yourself and then have your friends, family and colleagues confirm that information or vouch for that. You can even turn things around and give permission to your friends, family and colleagues to write and maintain Wiki page about you.

I don't use LinkedIn but when I stumble upon someone's page, I often see testimonies from their work colleagues about them.

bondarchuk•5mo ago
There's this wiki (I forget the link sorry) that always gave me the impression that it was made by people disgruntled they were turned away from wikipedia for original research, that's full of original research by self-styled experts. I'm sure you could write an article on yourself there, after all who's more an expert in yourself than you?
mrkramer•5mo ago
The only viable and useful alternative to Wikipedia that I found is https://golden.com/ (it somewhat loads slow for me but it is useful.)

Often when I search for startups and their founders I can't find information about them on Wikipedia but I find it on Golden.

bbor•5mo ago
It's incredibly telling that the alternative you seek is a for-profit firm built on datamining other site's data without permission...
mrkramer•5mo ago
>without permission

If it is without permission than it is illegal and people can sue otherwise web scraping is legal.

zesterer•5mo ago
They did. It's called 'DNS' and you can set up a 'page' about yourself if you want.
xanderlewis•5mo ago
It doesn’t kinda suck.

Wikipedia is supposed to be an encyclopaedia, which means it’s intended to come with some expectation of neutrality.

If you could edit your own page, do you really think it’d stay as factual and as neutral as possible?

Just make yourself a website.

emilfihlman•5mo ago
I find the hubris of this article absolutely disheartening, and toxic, and it frankly just reinforces how Wikipedia isn't a good place, and people who shouldn't have control over it have control over it.

And it isn't because of the self promoting described, but because of the response to it.

Deletionists are evil.

Jolter•5mo ago
Could you expand on why you feel that this series of deletions is wrong?
folkrav•5mo ago
Care to explain what was bad about the response?
Tainnor•5mo ago
Apart from the fact that this was pure self-promotion, it was also spamming the Wikipedias of small language communities with low-effort autotranslated garbage, which I think is rather insulting.
asimovDev•5mo ago
What a coincidence. Just yesterday i watched a youtube video about Corbin Bleu being the 3rd most translated article on wikipedia after Jesus and Barack Obama. Not surprised to see that it was a one user effort once again

[0] https://youtu.be/vJ_pEP3fRvM

cpa•5mo ago
Shameless plug about a little game I wrote a few years ago, about guessing which pages exist in the most languages in wikipedia:

https://wikilingua.charlespierre.fr/

ks2048•5mo ago
So, should the David Woodard article have a section about this?
vhcr•5mo ago
Wikipedia is not a reliable source for a Wikipedia article, so someone would have to create a news article talking about it.
encom•5mo ago
Thus completing the Wikipedia human centipede.
equinoxnemesis•5mo ago
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style/Self...
kjellsbells•5mo ago
This may be a "well, of course it's that way" observation to some, but: the article on X in wikipedia is typically quite different in one language than another. So you can get interesting insights by reading about X in different languages.

For example, the French article about David Hockney has a lovely Francophone twist in that the first few lines point out that he lived in Normandy for a few years, whereas Emglish Wikipedia buries the fact deep in the page. The page for VLC has a photo of the lead dev in the French page but no discussion of the plugin architecture. And so on. It doesn't seem unreasonable to me to assume that the pages in some languages might be particularly strong if the topic plays a bigger role in the culture than in the English-speaking world.

The-Bus•5mo ago
It's also interesting to see what decisions editors have made about animals. In English, for example, the article for the African elephant[1] is just the animal's name.

In Italian, Spanish, and Tagalog it's the scientific name of the animal.

This makes sense in languages (like Spanish) where an animal may have a lot of different names depending on the country, region, or dialect. If you look at the article for Pig[2], you'll see at least fifteen names listed.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_bush_elephant [2] https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sus_scrofa_domestica

nickpsecurity•5mo ago
We could probably add it to multilingual, training sets for A.I..

Previously, the ones trained on a thousand or more languages by Meta and Wycliffe used the Bible since it's the only complex, rich message translated to most, human languages. Which God said would happen to His authentic message. :)

https://interestingengineering.com/innovation/meta-used-bibl...

nativeit•5mo ago
Oh boy, that picture of Woodard...I've never seen anyone who would look quite so comfortable in an SS uniform. Maybe Stephen Miller. Elon Musk looks like an imperial admiral from Star Wars being choked by Darth Vader's invisible hand. Once you see it, you won't be able to un-see it.