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A Realistic AI Timeline

https://vintagedata.org/blog/posts/realistic-ai-timeline
1•paulpauper•2m ago•0 comments

Morality of Advertising: Ads in ChatGPT?

https://syin.bearblog.dev/morality-of-advertising/
1•varal7•2m ago•0 comments

Beeve.ai – Your AI agent Built for conversion

https://beeve.ai/en
1•sofukilde•2m ago•1 comments

The End of Mutual Assured Destruction?

https://www.foreignaffairs.com/united-states/artificial-intelligence-end-mutual-assured-destruction
2•paulpauper•3m ago•0 comments

Northern Ghana Travel Notes

https://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2025/08/northern-ghana-travel-notes.html
1•paulpauper•4m ago•0 comments

Line at Infinity

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Line_at_infinity
2•tosh•4m ago•0 comments

Fingerjigger

https://fingerjigger.com/play
1•bookofjoe•7m ago•0 comments

Though tiny, pathogens could become Israel's deadliest weapon in Gaza

https://www.middleeasteye.net/opinion/though-tiny-pathogens-could-become-israels-deadliest-weapon-gaza
1•zwarenst•7m ago•0 comments

Circadian clock in synthetic cells reveals timekeeping principles

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-025-61844-5
1•PaulHoule•10m ago•0 comments

A New Alternative to Opioids

https://www.kyoto-u.ac.jp/en/research-news/2025-08-05
2•geox•12m ago•0 comments

WIP: Nvidia Parakeet ASR mode inference in GGML

https://github.com/jason-ni/parakeet.cpp
2•jasonni•16m ago•1 comments

Open-source basic income is finally here

https://github.com/stateless-minds/cyber-gubi
2•mar1n3r0•17m ago•0 comments

KDE calls Microsoft's Copilot key "dumb", will let you remap it soon

https://www.neowin.net/news/kde-calls-microsofts-copilot-key-dumb-will-let-you-remap-it-soon/
3•bundie•18m ago•0 comments

Why AI's Tom Cruise problem means it is 'doomed to fail' (2024)

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/article/2024/aug/06/ai-llms
1•wslh•20m ago•0 comments

SortBench: Benchmarking LLMs based on their ability to sort lists

https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.08312
2•wslh•20m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Visuali.io – Edit Images with Prompts and More on a Canvas

https://visuali.io
1•visuali•21m ago•0 comments

Repoless – DevOps platform for Ruby Devs who hate overpaying for hosting

2•Whlthy•25m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Visualizing my 500 journal entries and building an LLM-ghost upon it

https://github.com/bvrvl/Smriti
1•bvrvl•26m ago•0 comments

The current state of LLM-driven development

http://blog.tolki.dev/posts/2025/08-07-llms/
2•Signez•26m ago•0 comments

Millionaire on Billionaire Violence

https://pluralistic.net/2025/08/09/elite-disunity/#awoken-giants
4•almost-exactly•28m ago•0 comments

AI Doesn't Just Lie – It Can Make You Believe It

http://bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2025-08-09/ai-doesn-t-just-lie-it-can-make-you-believe-it
3•Bluestein•28m ago•0 comments

Extension that allows your Chrome browser to share context with LLMs

https://github.com/Aletech-Solutions/XandAI-Extension
1•alexerKeyan•29m ago•0 comments

Our Age of Zombie Culture

https://www.newyorker.com/culture/critics-notebook/our-age-of-zombie-culture
2•petethomas•31m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: How do you find honest tech reviews?

4•bjourne•34m ago•0 comments

Tracing the Origins of Fisher-Price Little People

https://brainbaking.com/post/2025/08/tracing-the-origins-of-fisher-price-little-people/
2•Brajeshwar•35m ago•0 comments

The Attention Economy and Young People

https://www.profgalloway.com/the-attention-economy-and-young-people/
2•Brajeshwar•35m ago•0 comments

Spacecraft could carry up to 2,400 people on a one-way trip to Alpha Centauri

https://www.livescience.com/space/space-exploration/proposed-spacecraft-could-carry-up-to-2-400-people-on-a-one-way-trip-to-the-nearest-star-system-alpha-centauri
2•Brajeshwar•37m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: ChatGPT – GTM Reverse Engineered – Pre Virality

1•mehra-vaayushop•38m ago•0 comments

The Troubling Decline in Conscientiousness

https://www.ft.com/content/5cd77ef0-b546-4105-8946-36db3f84dc43
1•thm•39m ago•2 comments

Call for Research Participants

https://forms.cloud.microsoft/pages/responsepage.aspx?id=MH_ksn3NTkql2rGM8aQVG4hQje9sBRtPqjtJ6uM5xsVUM0szTktOWEFPSjYwTThWWTNNRThMNFVZNy4u&route=shorturl
1•jhYYY•41m ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

Mexico to US Livestock Trade halted due to Screwworm spread

https://www.usda.gov/about-usda/news/press-releases/2025/07/09/secretary-rollins-takes-decisive-action-and-shuts-down-us-southern-border-ports-livestock-trade-due
147•burnt-resistor•2h ago

Comments

Glyptodon•1h ago
One more thing where we're going back in time. Sure seems like a new decline and fall is coming bit by bit.
neom•1h ago
I'd never head of screwworm before, turns out it's not a worm, this page is pretty decent: https://cr.usembassy.gov/sections-offices/aphis/screwworm-pr...

"A screwworm infestation is caused by larvae of the fly Cochliomyia hominivorax. These larvae can infest wounds of any warm-blooded animal, including human beings. The screwworm fly is about twice the size of a regular house fly and can be distinguished by its greenish-blue color and its large reddish-orange eyes.

Infestations can occur in any open wound, including cuts, castration wounds, navels of newborn animals, and tick bites. The wounds often contain a dark, foul-smelling discharge. Screwworm larvae distinguish themselves from other species by feeding only on the living flesh, never dead tissue. Once a wound is infested, the screwworm can eventually kill the animal or human, literally eating it alive." - Sounds great.

guerrilla•1h ago
> Screwworm larvae distinguish themselves from other species by feeding only on the living flesh, never dead tissue.

What assholes. :(

lazide•55m ago
Yeah the switch on these guys was definitely flipped to ‘evil’
mc32•1h ago
The key to managing this pest [edit: after it breaches the isthmus program] is through active monitoring, treating infested wounds as well as conducting castration and dehorning in less active months. It’s not like cattle herds didn’t exist prior to the 1950s.
tptacek•56m ago
That's in fact not how screwworms are managed; the "border" of screwworm prevalence was managed by spreading sterilized male screwworms.
mc32•41m ago
That’s how we manage them now. I mean before we had that program, we dealt with the pest/infestation that way and we can in the future too if need be to combat what’s getting through. Obviously neutralizing them down in the isthmus is preferred but we’re seeing them come up from Mexico now. So if you have a minor infestation that’s how you treat it to address whatever gets missed by the sterilization program.

It doesn’t render the cattle or meat from the cattle useless. Obviously if affected cattle are untreated they will succumb to pest.

tptacek•38m ago
The whole reason this is newsworthy is that the system we had prior to eradication was not good.
mc32•36m ago
Yes, obviously; but it’s not the end of the cattle industry as some make it out to be.

To clarify: it was never eradicated. It’s been actively managed and kept at bay. Now it’s punching through some holes.

colechristensen•1h ago
Here's a video describing the system that fell apart which had been working for a long time to keep these flies out of north america

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Olj8arvfYj4

neutered_knot•1h ago
A story from 2020 about how effective the US funded anti-screwworm program used to be.

https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2020/05/flesh-ea...

Archive link: https://archive.ph/3sD9d

ajmurmann•1h ago
Why is it "used to be"? I've heard about the program before and thought it was incredible. What happened to it?

Edit: Brief research tells me the screwworms broke though to Mexico in November 2024 after cases started increasing north of the Darian Gap throughout 2023 (https://www.aphis.usda.gov/news/program-update/new-world-scr...). It does seem like the funding now is happening through USDA rather than USAID (https://www.aphis.usda.gov/livestock-poultry-disease/cattle/...) and there likely was a funding gap. As much as I like to blame the current administration for defunding USAID the breakthrough happened earlier.

cogman10•1h ago
DOGE. It was ran by USAID.
treetalker•1h ago
Make America Grubby Again
smallmancontrov•1h ago
Elon was the real screwworm all along.
mindslight•41m ago
Musk certainly shares responsibility, but focusing responsibility on him lets others escape blame - eg Trump, Congress, the corpo and individual edgelord enablers sanguine about chaos, etc.

And frankly, it's sad enough for Musk already - richest guy in the world, could have actually done something politically on his own, and yet he still ends up being used as a useful idiot by a con artist. "But Trump promised he cared about the debt!!1!1!"

VladVladikoff•1h ago
It was failing long before this. The border used to be down by Panama.
cogman10•1h ago
The first sign of spread past panama was seen in Nov 2024. Parasites can spread fast and the US/Mexico needed to react fast to the fact that it spread past panama.

In a critical time when monitoring and action were desperately needed, we eliminated the agency that'd do that.

literalAardvark•1h ago
It wasn't a critical time, it was late.

If there had been any political will for this things would have been set in motion since 2023, likely even before that when the reports from the scientists working on control started pouring in.

Blaming a few weeks of funding lapse one year into an outbreak in a control project that's been running for decades is absurd.

From a link in this thread: However, since 2023, cases have been increasing in number and spreading north from Panama to Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala, Belize, and Mexico.

asacrowflies•1h ago
Late is still a critical time...perhaps more critical.
cogman10•1h ago
Fair point.

The cost to fight this back will definitely exponentially increase.

tptacek•39m ago
Ok, but where did you get that Nov '24 date from? You just agreed with a comment that falsified that claim.
smallmancontrov•1h ago
The border didn't magically eradicate the flies on one side. Pushing the border down to the Darien Gap took work, but we did it before and can do it again. The real problem is the gleeful destruction of government capacity to do things like this.
tptacek•58m ago
Yes, that's true, but the point the parent commenter was making is that recent previous administrations also didn't take this problem seriously.
smallmancontrov•44m ago
Who was president in 2020 again?
tptacek•41m ago
You get that there was a president between 2020 and now, right? Nobody is sticking up for Trump; they're just saying, this particular bad thing isn't a DOGE outcome.
rdl•52m ago
And the Panama border (Darien Gap, specifically) used to be a stronger natural barrier; humans have been crossing it for years, are starting to graze cows within the exclusion zone, etc.
jfengel•1h ago
Yeah, it got cut back in March.

https://kbhbradio.com/usda-cuts-budget-staff-for-animal-dise...

Part of it was restored a couple of months later.

throwup238•1h ago
Funding was recently cut but this infestation has been building for years. The key failure that caused this current outbreak was during COVID. The lockdowns shut down both the release flights by the US and the mosquito breeding facilities in Latina America, grinding the whole pest control program to a halt.
Noumenon72•1h ago
Someone must have decided they weren't "essential". Big mistake.
andsoitis•1h ago
Not essential. We can eat less beef. Better for health, the environment.
kristjansson•1h ago
And we should encourage that by leveraging the response to a natural disaster to advance your particular policy goals?
ajmurmann•1h ago
Doesn't this impact wildlife as well? Apparently the Florida Key Deer was threatened by this a decade ago: https://www.avma.org/javma-news/2017-01-15/screwworm-infesta...
Numerlor•59m ago
Screwworm also infects wildlife and occasionally humans, it's really not something you want to have in the area if you can help it
raverbashing•57m ago
Funny, you don't seem to have beef with the worm eating beef

But it can and does infect humans and other animals

AlecSchueler•13m ago
They didn't say they had beef with anyone eating beef.
lazide•55m ago
Screwworms will eat people too, if allowed to. You really don’t want them in your area.
SoftTalker•44m ago
Already happening. Beef is rapidly becomming unaffordable. A steak at the supermarket is >$20. Can't imagine what they cost at a restaurant. I've switched to mostly turkey, chicken, and pork.
alephnerd•36m ago
That's due to issues around monopolization in the Dairy and Cattle industry in the US. 70% of all processors in the dairy and cattle industry are now owned by 3 companies. Processors don't own cattle - they just process raw material like dairy and meat into cheese and pasteurized milk and handle the entire supply chain. But because they control the supply chain, distribution, and even the feed [0] used they can set rates and vendors used.

I posted an article about this earlier on HN, but it seems HNers like to talk about antitrust for search engines and not dairy and beef production.

Antitrust for me, oligopolic market forces for thee.

[0] - https://www.landolakesinc.com/what-we-do/animal-nutrition/

gruez•23m ago
Is this supported by the data? During the pandemic people were also blaming "monopolization" or "consolidation" for the rise in grocery prices, but in reality the margins of publicly traded supermarket companies went up by a percentage point or two.
alephnerd•19m ago
Yep. To quote The Bullvine [0] (Axios for the cattle and dairy industry):

"Here’s another force reshaping the industry that has nothing to do with immigration: processor consolidation. According to industry analysis, just three major cooperatives—Dairy Farmers of America, Land O’Lakes, and California Dairies—now handle over 80% of the nation’s milk marketing.

These processors need massive, consistent volumes. New processing plants require millions of pounds of milk per day to operate efficiently. From a logistical standpoint, it’s far more efficient to contract with a dozen 5,000-cow dairies than 500 smaller operations.

I was at a dairy conference in Wisconsin last year where a DFA representative candidly admitted: “We’re building plants that need 4-5 million pounds per day. We can’t deal with 200 small farms—we need 10 large ones.”

This “processor pull” creates powerful incentives for farm-level consolidation. I’ve seen it happen firsthand in regions where a new mega-processing plant opens—suddenly, there’s pressure on every farm in the area to either scale up or get squeezed out"

Also [1]

-----------

The fact that a country like India can support 228 milk cooperatives each generating around $500-2B in revenue and outcompete American dairy+cattle in production and even reducing environmental impact with marginal subsidizes [2] means distribution+processing consolidation and it's side effects (cattle monoculture, non-competitive prices given to farmers, dairy processers NOW becoming animal feed manufacturers) are a good example of market failures due to oligopolic control.

No one at the WI and MI state Dem level is chatting about this based on some of my own meeting with them recently. This is the kind of swing vote topic that can flip all 3 branches of government in 26 and 28.

Some of the comments I'm seeing here on HN are reminiscent to those who blamed autoworkers and coalworkers for not learning to code back in 2014.

[0] - https://www.thebullvine.com/dairy-industry/dairys-great-cons...

[1] - https://www.thebullvine.com/news/will-your-dairy-farm-surviv...

[2] - https://www.thebullvine.com/dairy-industry/from-extinction-t...

ModernMech•10m ago
Market failures due to oligarchic control is the natural end state of capitalism. Everything is going as intended, the point of the system is to produce oligarchs, not efficient markets.
gruez•9m ago
By "data" I was referring to data to support the claim that consolidation led to increase in prices (eg. margin expansion), not that consolidation was happening at all. It's the same with supermarkets. There's no doubt that consolidation was happening, and there's even evidence that it led to higher prices, but the absolute effect on grocery bills seems to be marginal.
HDThoreaun•31m ago
Im still getting outer skirt for $8 a pound at my grocery. Seems pretty affordable to me
genghisjahn•12m ago
I get great cuts of steak for less than $10 all the time.
alephnerd•30m ago
> Better for health, the environment.

India has an equally large cattle industry that outproduces American dairy and cattle, yet their industry has a fraction of the carbon and methane impact as American dairy and cattle rearing [0] because the feed used in Indian industry is crop residue instead of industrialized meat+grain mixtures.

American Ag is hyperconsolidated into 3 processors which makes it difficult for innovations to develop, whereas an equally large country like India has 228 local run dairy cooperatives and multiple private sector players each generating around $500M-2B in revenue.

[0] - https://www.thebullvine.com/dairy-industry/from-extinction-t...

gruez•11m ago
>India has an equally large cattle industry that outproduces American dairy and cattle

That's a tad misleading. The statistics I could find only says that India outproduces the US in dairy, not beef. Rounding

>yet their industry has a fraction of the carbon and methane impact as American dairy and cattle rearing [0]

I did a cursory search in your source for "carbon" and "methane" and couldn't find anything to back this claim, only vague claims about how India does "Regenerative farming" and is therefore "low methane".

>because the feed used in Indian industry is crop residue instead of industrialized meat+grain mixtures.

That's not scalable and only works because the country is poor and beef/dairy consumption isn't high. There's no way you can supply American level demand for beef/dairy by only using crop residue.

>American Ag is hyperconsolidated into 3 processors which makes it difficult for innovations to develop, whereas an equally large country like India has 26 state run dairy cooperatives and multiple private sector players.

You can easily tell an opposite story about how consolidate companies have bigger budgets for R&D and capital projects, as opposed to 26 cooperatives each trying to implement some sort of strategy.

zahlman•30m ago
Screwworms will also infect humans, with horrific and potentially fatal consequences.
FpUser•20m ago
>"Not essential. We can eat less beef. Better for health, the environment."

We can also live in a cave, better for the environment.

spamizbad•15m ago
I guess nature is “finding a way” after all…
zahlman•31m ago
> Brief research tells me the screwworms broke though to Mexico in November 2024 after cases started increasing north of the Darian Gap throughout 2023

Elsewhere in the thread people have posted explainer videos (of how the program works) from 2024 that seem entirely unaware of any such breach.

mistyvales•1h ago
Didn't they pull funding for mitigation programs regarding this? Or was that rescinded?
ethan_smith•1h ago
Yes, the USDA-APHIS Screwworm Barrier Maintenance Program had its funding reduced by 30% in the 2024 budget, which significantly impacted sterile fly production capacity at the Panama facility.
Panoramix•43m ago
citation?

USDA approved an emergency funding of 165 million in 2024 for this issue

https://www.aphis.usda.gov/news/agency-announcements/usda-ap...

drhodes•1h ago
A recent, relevant video from Kurzgesagt: How Nuclear Flies Protect You from Flesh-Eating Parasites https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zxq60I5RSW8
raaron773•1h ago
I was wondering where i heard the term screwworm before!
cogman10•1h ago
USAID was in charge of the program which monitored screwworm spread in central and south america. The way you combat screwworm is by releasing sterile male flies in screwworm outbreak areas.
LMYahooTFY•1h ago
Do you have a source? Because this appears to be false. I can't find anything indicating it was funded by USAID.

Everything I'm reading says it has been funded by USDA, and in fact funding has been significantly increased during 2025.

cogman10•1h ago
https://www.agri-pulse.com/articles/22636-bird-flu-screwworm...

USDA manages the production of the sterile flies. USAID was a major funding source for the UN Food and Agriculture Organization which did the monitoring.

nnutter•49m ago
I appreciate you citing the USAID funding but you seem to be trying to prove a point rather than get to the truth. Screwworm detection and prevention was not halted because of the USAID shutdown, USDA is actively working on it, one can see this by going to usda.gov and searching for "screwworm". I really appreciate ajmurmann's edit which acknowledges this.
grej•1h ago
The US successfully eradicated screwworms here in 1966 with a brilliant integrated sterile insect technique - I think the very first use of it (and had previously funded helping other countries control it also). But if we had another outbreak spread, I doubt there's any shred of competence left in this current gutted federal government to do anything like that again. Maybe they can have the new ICE folks try to deport the screwworm flies.
jfengel•1h ago
They announced funding to do it again, back in June. But I have no idea if there's anyone around to pay.
superxpro12•1h ago
Lead times are asymmetric.
amoshebb•1h ago
Some folks are posting about the regular flights over Panama, and I’ve seen talk about ending screwworm with a “gene drive”, but I also feel that it doesn’t feel necessary.

But a third option I don’t see talked about a lot: finish the job. We could drop sterile flies all over the USA and Mexico all the way into panama with 1950s tech. We have drones now, surely some inexpensive paper planes shoved out of the back of hercs could cover roughly all of south america for fairly cheap.

throwup238•1h ago
There is no finishing the job. Screwworm flies have tons of reservoirs in the jungles of Central America that aren’t practical to eliminate for logistical and ecological reasons. We can only control the population in agriculturally important areas by constantly releasing the sterile male flies every year. Whenever we stop the releases, the flies bounce back in a few years.
rdl•49m ago
The durable reservoirs are in South America, not Central America. We actually eradicated it (at least essentially) all the way down to the Darien Gap.
whynotmaybe•1h ago
> This is maintained with stringent animal movement controls, surveillance, trapping, and following the proven science to push the NWS barrier south in phases as quickly as possible.

Why add "proven" before science?

Nobody expects the USDA to handle such problems with "unproven science", for whatever it could be.

For decades they've made the sterilized flies by exposing them to gamma radiation that damages their reproductive system and it's been effective.

Am I getting doubtful of every announcement from this administration or are they trying to tackle conspiracy theories from the start?

jeff_lee•1h ago
Feels like we had the cure in our hands and just let the disease walk back in.
thrown-0825•1h ago
I assumed this was a computer virus affecting an exchange based on it being at the top of HN.
dlisboa•1h ago
With this and the tariffs on Brazil the US consumer is going to feel it.
Pxtl•55m ago
This was literally one of the first North American disasters I saw predicted as falling out of the Doge cuts.
Bender•40m ago
Whether your meat comes form South America or the US or the EU, always wear gloves when handling raw meats and don't touch your face. There are thousands of types of dangerous larvae that can infect via the eyes rubbing the eyes or the nose picking ones nose when handling raw meats and vegetables. Cutting meat slices thinner and cooking them well kills larvae. Marinating meats with something that contains acetic acid also helps. Stomach acid takes care of the rest.

Beware of the fear porn spreading around this issue. I have already seen articles posted showing what happens when rubbing ones eyes or picking ones nose after handling raw food and of course it is horrific but screw worms are just one of many real risks. Food handlers in first world countries are taught not to touch their faces and to wear gloves among many other safety practices with raw meats and vegetables. Everyone both vegetarian and carnivore unknowingly eat many types of larvae, bacteria, mold, fungus and insects all the time.

I know I will get beat up for going against the agenda but I am that guy.

Aurornis•33m ago
> I know I will get beat up for going against the agenda but I am that guy.

Food safety with raw meets isn’t really going against the agenda.

erredois•35m ago
Coming from a family that has cattle and dairy cows in south eastern Brazil, where screwworm is endemic, I was surprised when I listened to a podcast about screwworm, and some of the descriptions about how huge the problem was in the US. After some research it appears it affects more climates that are always hot and humid, and big operations where the animals are not being checked frequently. Also the handling at the 60s was probably much worse than modern techniques for avoiding animals being hurt and treating when they are infected.
Aurornis•28m ago
> I was surprised when I listened to a podcast about screwworm, and some of the descriptions about how huge the problem was in the US.

It’s not a huge problem in the US. We eradicated screwworm in the 60s.

We are trying very hard to keep it out. The US normally works very hard to monitor and prevent these situations in trade partners.

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/flesh-eating-scre...