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Volonaut Airbike

https://volonaut.com
2•AndrewKemendo•3m ago•0 comments

Kibble-fed dogs have worse metabolic outcomes than raw-meat-fed dogs

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1090023325001662
2•hilux•8m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Answer to Life, the Universe and Everything – interactive exploration

https://miuchan.github.io/
1•miuchan•10m ago•0 comments

Inputs

https://matthew.rayfield.world/projects/inputs/
2•pentagrama•14m ago•0 comments

Cold Drinks and Paper Cups

https://0xmmo.notion.site/Cold-Drinks-and-Paper-Cups-28f013e9768a80dcafcdc91c86f15ab6?pvs=74
2•mmoustafa•17m ago•0 comments

Andrej Karpathy on AI Agent: everyone pretends it is amazing, it's not it's slop

https://twitter.com/scaling01/status/1979253569309041033
3•donsupreme•18m ago•1 comments

One thing has been holding back the Middle East

https://www.thetimes.com/comment/columnists/article/middle-east-religious-fanaticism-iran-kcvh5knn3
1•minifyre•20m ago•1 comments

Timezones as Types: Making Time Safer to Use in Go

https://www.matthewhalpern.com/posts/golang-type-safe-timezones/
1•mhalpern•21m ago•0 comments

Huggingchat Omni: Model router at inference for 115 open-source models

https://huggingface.co/chat/
1•clmnt•23m ago•1 comments

AI Trading in Real Markets

https://nof1.ai/
1•wave100•25m ago•2 comments

Parrot – fused array operations using CUDA/Thrust

https://github.com/NVlabs/parrot
1•coffeeaddict1•29m ago•0 comments

The Science of Complexity

https://www.explorablescience.com/articles/science_of_complexity
4•tzury•29m ago•0 comments

Building Agents

https://www.aisdktools.com/docs/agents/building-agents
1•nolansym•35m ago•0 comments

How the Brain Moves from Waking Life to Sleep and Back Again

https://www.quantamagazine.org/how-the-brain-moves-from-waking-life-to-sleep-and-back-again-20251...
2•jnord•38m ago•0 comments

America's EV Charging Network Has a Reliability Problem

https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Americas-EV-Charging-Network-Has-a-Reliability-Problem...
1•PaulHoule•39m ago•0 comments

The State of the AI Industry Is Freaking Me Out

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q0TpWitfxPk
2•CharlesW•39m ago•0 comments

Energy Department Announces Roadmap to Accelerate Commercial Fusion Power

https://www.energy.gov/articles/energy-department-announces-fusion-science-and-technology-roadmap...
3•mfiguiere•40m ago•0 comments

Wine 10.17 (Dev) – Run Windows Applications on Linux, BSD, Solaris and macOS

https://gitlab.winehq.org/wine/wine/-/releases/wine-10.17
2•neustradamus•41m ago•0 comments

Only 40% of Workers Have High-Quality Jobs, Gallup Finds

https://www.gallup.com/analytics/691241/american-job-quality-study.aspx
2•jnord•42m ago•0 comments

Fix Slow Query: A Developer's Guide to Data Warehouse Performance

https://motherduck.com/learn-more/diagnose-fix-slow-queries/
1•manveerc•42m ago•0 comments

Best practices to kill your team proactivity

https://leadthroughmistakes.substack.com/p/best-practices-to-kill-your-team
1•birdculture•46m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Pluely v0.1.6 -Open Source Invisible AI Assistant,Alternative to Cluely

https://pluely.com/downloads
3•truly_sn•52m ago•4 comments

Token-Relief

https://hollisrobbinsanecdotal.substack.com/p/token-relief
1•HR01•54m ago•0 comments

Walking is good for you. Walking backward can add to the benefits

https://apnews.com/article/walking-backward-fitness-workout-routine-26cb7374dedb2f01cdb4993cc77dd08c
2•petethomas•54m ago•0 comments

France's Gets Debt Warning as S&P Downgrades in Unscheduled Move

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-10-17/france-s-gets-debt-warning-as-s-p-downgrades-i...
6•zerosizedweasle•59m ago•2 comments

Creating Digital Replicas of History with AI

https://cacm.acm.org/news/creating-digital-replicas-of-history-with-ai/
1•sohkamyung•1h ago•1 comments

Mapped: The Compute, Cash, and Contracts That Power OpenAI

https://www.visualcapitalist.com/cp/compute-cash-contracts-that-power-openai/
2•yandie•1h ago•0 comments

Salesforce Pitched a 'Talent Acquisition' Contract to ICE

https://sfist.com/2025/10/17/another-clue-about-marc-benioffs-trumpy-turn-salesforce-was-pitching...
6•geox•1h ago•0 comments

Subwavelength phase engineering deep inside silicon

https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/2515-7647/adf7ef/meta
2•westurner•1h ago•1 comments

Ask HN: What is your go to job board?

1•rrmdp•1h ago•2 comments
Open in hackernews

Meow.camera

https://meow.camera/
600•southwindcg•20h ago

Comments

SeanAnderson•18h ago
So this is like that fish camera thing where humans would identify when the fish ladder gate needed to be opened to let fish through, but this time it's for feeding stray kitties?

Or maybe there's no human interaction? I don't have the Purrr app.

lazycatjumping•18h ago
We need a remote-petting-arm so we can pet the cat'berts over long distance lines.

Also a microphone for receiving feedback.

berkes•15h ago
Or just walk over to the local cat rescue?

Not every problem needs a technical, internet connected solution Some problems are easily solved with "just going out of the door and spending some time" (which, I know, is not a very HN answer, but well)

hshdhdhehd•14h ago
Hey Cat as a Service (we meow not concatenate) is a fine idea
NoiseBert69•11h ago
I have already patented SaaS. Sheep as a Service.
WesolyKubeczek•14h ago
Touch Grass as a Service?
FireInsight•13h ago
We need a remote-grass-touching-arm so we can touch grass over long distance lines.
blitzar•12h ago
and a remote foot for the feet people
berkes•8h ago
But how can this "remote-grass-touching-arm" push the "smell" and "tactile" back to the user? Is there an open spec for this? It should certainly be P2P and E2E encrypted. Also "smells" should ensure not to use patented or proprietary names.

Maybe some CSmS, Cascading Smell Sheets? Or TFP, Tactile Feedback Protocol, the one that uses JWT and JSON over HTTP2 and websockets?

notfed•17h ago
Sooo I really expected this to have a way to donate money to specific cats. If you added this feature I honestly think it'd be a viral idea.
dcrazy•17h ago
Unfortunately the Internet has taught me to immediately speculate on how this could be used to monetize animal abuse.
typpilol•17h ago
I like the one cat rescue out of ohio that streams their cat area inside 24/7.

They get a ton of donations of food and toys so it seems to work out well.

ascorbic•17h ago
You can: https://streetcat.wiki/index.php/Purrrr
ascorbic•17h ago
There's some good explanation of what this is all about here: https://streetcat.wiki/

Specially, details of the actual feeders: https://streetcat.wiki/index.php/Stray_Cat_Feeders

dcrazy•17h ago
Thank you; I tried to find an “about” link but couldn’t.
ascorbic•17h ago
There's one in the bottom left, but there's not much detail so I did some googling
moffkalast•15h ago
> Stupid Idiot is a now adopted cat, named after the markings on his face

I'm glad for Mr. Stupid Idiot :D

thrance•13h ago
Apparently he's named idiot because his moustache markings resemble the chinese character for "idiot", and stupid because he once flooded his feeder with the water bottle, somehow.
torarnv•13h ago
This seems like a good initiative, but makes me wonder, isn't there a risk these cats will end up overeating when endless Internet-people click the feed-button?
RobotToaster•12h ago
Cats generally don't overeat like dogs do.
braebo•11h ago
My cat would literally pop if he could eat as much as he wanted :(
IAmBroom•9h ago
My entire experience with cats disagrees.
ooterness•8h ago
It depends on the cat. Some will self-regulate, others will not.
GreenWatermelon•50m ago
The "oh lawd he comin"[0] meme is popular precisely because cat tend to over eat.

[0] https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/chonk-oh-lawd-he-comin

tommica•17h ago
Now this is pure internet gold.
ahoka•16h ago
Gold? It's depressing.
qbit42•13h ago
Why? They're providing food for stray cats.
thenthenthen•10h ago
*purr internet gold
maz1b•17h ago
Didn't expect to find something this wonderful on HN!

Good start to the morning.

KolibriFly•13h ago
Every now and then
LauraMedia•12h ago
Every meow and then
unsnap_biceps•17h ago
The "Mr. Cloud & Mr. Peach (Yichen's Place)" feeder has an ant infestation and I just watched them team up to take a few kibble out of the feeder.
b-zee•15h ago
Also saw insects at "Mr. Sweetpea, Ducks (Bald Carrot Meow Guardian)" (https://meow.camera/#4300845904274638881)
southwindcg•10h ago
I saw a slug eating in another feeder, but I feel like a little sprinkle of salt around the lower perimeter outside the base would deter them.
pamelafox•17h ago
Love this! Relatedly, does anyone have a suggestion for an outdoor solar-powered web camera that I could point at the critters in my garden? I'd love to stream a MonarchCam or MantisCam some day.
TheChaplain•14h ago
Reolink have one.

Used Reolink ages ago for home surveillance and it worked well then.

heywoods•17h ago
I don’t know why I expected anything else with that url.
omcnoe•17h ago
These feeders are part of a stray cat control program in China, aiming to both feed & neuter stray cat populations there.

There have been some distasteful incidents of online groups organizing to try and harm/kill specific cats famous through this feeder program. China lacks animal welfare laws to protect these cats, it's not a crime. So people have taken to identifying these abusers and reporting them to their employer, university etc. Abusers have been fired and expelled over such cases. Governments overseas whose citizens participate in such online abuse groups need to be doing more. Membership in online animal abuse groups needs to be criminalized.

Wowfunhappy•16h ago
"Membership" in anything should never be criminalized—that's freedom of association. Animal abuse should be criminalized.
omcnoe•16h ago
We essentially criminalize membership in other kinds of criminal groups centered around producing and sharing illegal content, the same should apply to animal abuse.
hshdhdhehd•15h ago
Yeah but do you need to criminalise membership, or does things like conspiracy, accomplace etc. cover it.
SiempreViernes•14h ago
Membership in an organisation can be conclusive evidence you joined a criminal enterprise/criminal conspiracy, making the the entire debate somewhat moot.

But fine, only joining the criminal conspiracy is illegal, being a member can be legal (you always have to join to become a member).

speed_spread•13h ago
You'll get slander cases of people receiving membership they never applied for. Having your name on some list should never be a crime in itself.
awesome_dude•16h ago
Tell that to the members of organisations deemed to be terrorists
hshdhdhehd•15h ago
Almost every freedom needs exceptions. Better to have freedom in general plus exceptions than no freedom at all. Free speech except yelling fire in the cinema etc.
timeon•15h ago
Ok so add this to these "exceptions".
hshdhdhehd•15h ago
I think with conspiracy you dont need to be that specific. Any crime you do as a group is a crime.
berkes•15h ago
I'm halfway up in middle management of the terrorist company called Antifa, career aiming at C level in 6 years (wink wink).
actionfromafar•14h ago
How's the health insurance? You got dental?
cromka•13h ago
Like the "ANTIFA"?
braebo•11h ago
It’s scary seeing the president call me a terrorist for opposing fascism.
Llamamoe•15h ago
You have a point but we are literally talking about an association whose entire and only raison d'etre is to perpetuate violent crime. Maybe it shouldn't be outright criminal, since people can potentially register for other reasons than to participate, but it definitely should at least be under scrutiny.
Xelbair•15h ago
The same reasoning could be used against civil rights movement.

That's why we don't do that, if our systems are functioning fine.

hnbad•14h ago
Could be? You should look into the history of the Black Panthers. The US government doesn't need to make membership illegal to suppress and destroy political movements.
ricardobeat•14h ago
I don’t mean to defend people joining groups committing any kind of violence, but this is the kind of rhetoric being used by the far-right against their opponents, not only in the US; it is a terrible idea to allow policing based on “assumed intent”.
the_other•14h ago
It's the same direction of travel as recent UK laws allowing police to stop people preparing to join protests if they think the accused might be planning to e.g. glue themselves to something.

IMO this is basically policing thought crimes. It worries me.

Llamamoe•10h ago
Rhetoric can be used to justify any action against any group on very arbitrary pretenses, and while I don't think "groups whose primary reason for existing is explicitly to facilitate crime should be closely scrutinized" is particularly dystopian, you're probably right that it could provide a good starting point for a slippery slope of criminalising association with political opposition :/
StopDisinfo910•14h ago
> "Membership" in anything should never be criminalized

Conspiracy is the criminalisation of association to commit a crime. Fredom of association doesn't magically mean you won't face consequences for what your association is about.

hnbad•14h ago
Membership in an anti-constitutional organization is a crime under German law btw and I'm pretty sure there are other countries with similar laws. The US does criminalize membership but only as an add-on to other charges (co-conspiracy, basically). Of course in the US this is mostly for going after "gangs" so it's almost exclusively used against Black people.
mlrtime•12h ago
Only black people are in gangs? What about organized crime, would that be only black people? Your comment was insightful up till the end when you had to make it about race, which it isn't.
layer8•11h ago
Regarding Germany, that’s inaccurate. It’s a crime only if you wilfully (not just out of negligence) provide support for an organization after it has been prohibited. Membership is neither necessary nor sufficient for that. It’s what you actually do for the organization once it’s prohibited that counts.
KolibriFly•13h ago
The focus should absolutely be on actions, not associations
Starlevel004•9h ago
We must secure the existence of animal abuse groups and a future for free association.
Recursing•15h ago
I'm not vegan, but I'm always really surprised by the difference in how we see cats and pigs. See e.g. https://theintercept.com/2020/05/29/pigs-factory-farms-venti...

https://www.ted.com/talks/lewis_bollard_how_to_end_factory_f...

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

The US also has basically no animal welfare laws for the vast majority of its animals

ricardobeat•14h ago
Don’t worry, if cats tasted good they would be receiving the same treatment!

The amount of cruel farming practices, chemicals, unsustainable methods etc that the US uses while being forbidden in the rest of the world is inexcusable.

esperent•14h ago
> if cats tasted good

How do you know they don't?

By all accounts dogs taste good, but there's only a small number of cultures that eat them.

Recursing•12h ago
Cats are also widely eaten: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat_meat

But I think eating someone doesn't need to imply causing them as much suffering as our current farming practices do

makeitdouble•14h ago
They probably don't taste bad...I mean, most animals somewhat taste good (crocodiles, frogs, hogs, deers, pigeons, eels etc). Now, it would be utterly ineffective to try to breed cats for meat, which is IMHO why we have such a small variety of regular meat. We chose the species that were the most convenient, regardless of any other inherent ethical consideration.

So for better or worse the line is purely arbitrary, and people's pet pig being off-limit by virtue of being declared a pet is an example of that.

petesergeant•14h ago
> Don’t worry, if cats tasted good they would be receiving the same treatment!

I don't think that's true: dog meat isn't widely eaten, but enough countries do eat it to suggest it's palatable.

isoprophlex•13h ago
Expensive to breed carnivorous animals though. Chickens, cows, etc. you can directly raise on cheap vegetable matter.
unnamed76ri•13h ago
I used to work in the pet industry and an oft cited statistic was that 1,000,000 cats and dogs are euthanized every year in the US. It would never happen for cultural reasons but, it seems like China could be a booming market for selling these animals as meat instead of letting it all go to waste.
petesergeant•12h ago
I think veterinary drug residue is a big concern here too
dotancohen•12h ago
Presumably these cats and dogs would be slaughtered the same way that current plate-bound cats and dogs are slaughtered.

The bigger issue would be how these animals are bred. Are the eaten cats and dogs typically more muscular and fatter than those raised as pets?

mlrtime•12h ago
I bet you if you haven't eaten in 3 days the cat would taste pretty good to you too.

I'm partially kidding, but we are afforded to have these discussions in the comfort in our home when we have an abundance of food around us available 24/7. (Speaking of mostly of developed nations)

grumpy-de-sre•14h ago
I suspect concerns about the impacts on agriculture are a big part of the reason why the Chinese authorities haven't clamped down on this stuff yet.
hshdhdhj4444•13h ago
Future generations are gonna look back at us for our treatment of animals, especially farmed animals, much the way we look back at our slave owning ancestors.

And just like we wonder how so many otherwise morally upstanding people participated in such an obviously abhorrent system as human slavery, they will think the same about people in our generation.

Unfortunately, it turns out that social norms are extremely powerful and even recognizing one is acting purely out of those social norms in ways that would be very obviously insanely unethical if looked at even slightly objectively is very difficult.

SapporoChris•13h ago
The pendulum could swing the other way and instead animal rights activists could be looked upon with complete disdain. Just like human rights, progress is never guaranteed.
mlrtime•12h ago
Dystopian comments are hot right now, but your comment really don't have basis when looking at long periods of time.

We are objectively in a better place now than ever, and that is usually true by picking a time and looking backwards 100+ years.

bdbdkdksk•11h ago
Considering the current US regime would like to revisit Wong Kim Ark (1898), the 19th amendment (1920) and the Voting Rights Act (1965) it's fair to say they're trying undo over 100 years of civil rights progress.

Not to mention the growing ICE detention camp archipelago which is reminiscent of the era of Japanese Interment (1942-1946).

Even economically - though we're in a K-shaped recovery - many of the labour protections and economic promises of the New Deal have been repealed since the Reagan era (by both parties).

the_gipsy•9h ago
When have dystopian comments NOT been hot? Maybe a few years in the 90's, between the fall of the USSR and the Balkan war?
SapporoChris•9h ago
I wasn't particularly being dystopian. I was thinking of the quote: "Progress has not followed a straight ascending line, but a spiral with rhythms of progress and retrogression, of evolution and dissolution."

– Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Imustaskforhelp•11h ago
> Just like human rights, progress is never guaranteed.

There is a sense of optimism/hope I have in humanity, not in short term, but long term (decades later)

I hope that the pendulum swings in an optimist manner. As a vegetarian who watched earthlings documentary, I recommend it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8gqwpfEcBjI&t=25s

I feel like the pendulum depends on all of us. We all gotta be hopeful and hope that other fellow beings also are like us and that gives hope I guess. We can swing the pendulum whatever side and its up to us in some aspect, so we personally need to do the best we can till the limit of our abilities

squigz•3h ago
Isn't it though? To be sure it very much depends on how you measure progress, but I do firmly believe that there is a slow but inexorable push forward in terms of equality, human rights, and various other issues. Yes, there will be hiccups, but we always move forward.

(I don't comment this to imply there's not a lot of work we have to do, or that there's not seriously fucked up things going on right now; but hope - perhaps, even, a bit of faith - is important.)

foresterre•12h ago
In his book Sapiens, Yuval Noah Harari called the farming of animals by humans "Nature's biggest fraud", which I always found to be an apt description.

It makes me wonder if humans are the only animals who "farm" other animals in some way (not on the same scale as humans do of course).

At the same time, it makes me wonder, "is being a parasitic animal socially better or worse than animals who farm fellow animals" ;).

RobotToaster•12h ago
There are ants that farm and "milk" aphids https://www.mcgill.ca/oss/article/did-you-know/farmer-ants-a...
chongli•12h ago
Ants farm aphids and another species of ant farms fungus.

Parasites are ubiquitous in nature and they range from the infamous cuckoo who lays eggs in other birds’ nests to tiny worms that infest the eyes of children to the horrifying tarantula hawk wasp that paralyses a spider and leads it to a burrow and then lays an egg which soon hatches and devours the still-living spider from the inside out!

jhbadger•10h ago
There are many parasitoid wasps, of which the tarantula hawk wasp is only one. It's an sound evolutionary strategy even if their existence even horrified Charles Darwin (and these wasps were obviously the inspiration for the Xenomorph in the Alien movies)
bbarnett•12h ago
There is an immense difference between factory farming, and traditional farming, of which most countries and places still do.

I don't know what sort of fantasy lifestyle people think wild animals live, but it's constant fear of death all day long, fights with other of its kind over territory, constant predation, disease, pests (including bot flies and worms), starvation during population upswings, dying of thirst during drought, and very short lives.

Compare that with protection from predators, medical care, vaccination, shelter, reliable food and clean water, and stress free lives until a quick and fast death.

Lumping caring farmers in with factory farming is unfair, and again most of the world isn't the US.

For animals such as cows? Peace, contentment, and stress free life is indeed a boon.

Traditional farmers don't install automated cow scratchers for profit. They do it so animals are happy:

https://m.youtube.com/shorts/h3SG72cKA9o

Recursing•10h ago
The vast majority of farmed animals are factory farmed: https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/almost-all-livestoc...

I agree that cows are an exception and live decent lives, but >95% of pigs, chickens, and fish are farmed in atrocious conditions, inside and outside the US: https://ourworldindata.org/how-many-animals-are-factory-farm...

bbarnett•10h ago
Then be angry at factory farming, not eating meat.

There are loads of people that still have a farm, just for them too. Yes, it's generally in rural areas in the West. Yet for thousands of years, people often just farmed to feed themselves!

Factory farming sucks. Yet this can be fixed, note that you don't need to full grass feed (as an example) to end factory farming. You just need room for mild grazing. We can easily feed people as we do now, not have factory farming, but still not have the tens of thousands of acres of grassland to feed a herd for 100% grass grazing.

This is just one example.

End factory farming. You have my support for that. You'll lose it if you take my dinner away. I suspect many are the same.

shlant•10h ago
> Then be angry at factory farming, not eating meat.

When one of the most common responses to pointing out how awful factory farming is "well you can just buy from farms" when the reality is that 99% of consumption comes from factory farms, it's completely reasonable to associate the two

> We can easily feed people as we do now, not have factory farming, but still not have the tens of thousands of acres of grassland to feed a herd for 100% grass grazing.

Going to need a source for that because all the information i've seen shows that there is absolutely not enough land to be able to sustain the current levels of meat consumption.

bbarnett•10h ago
Going to need a source for that because all the information i've seen shows that there is absolutely not enough land to be able to sustain the current levels of meat consumption.

You're sort of mixing up things here. Yes, there is enough land in some parts of the world (Canada, US), but that's not the point.

I specifically said not full grass feed. That's what people believe and assert there is not enough land for. You can still have some grass feeding, conjoined with grain feed. The animals get to be outside, have space to move around, but 1000 acres instead of 100k acres needed for full grass feeding the same herd.

As factory farms already feed those herds, clearly there's enough grain to feed them.

shlant•10h ago
> As factory farms already feed those herds, clearly there's enough grain to feed them.

1. Feed Conversion Ratio is worse for pasture-raised vs. factory farmed so that's not a given - animals being able to move more, waste more calories that aren't being converted to meat

2. You still haven't provided a source for your claim about land usage

bbarnett•9h ago
We already throw away 30% of our food, and everywhere I look there's fallow land ripe for crops where I live. Rural Canada.

That said, cattle don't need cropland to graze. They just need land that can grow some grass, and space to move around.

Yes there is a higher calorie count for moving around compared to sitting in a box every day. So? It's fairly widely known that we throw away massive amounts of grain due to lack of market.

No, I won't be providing sources or references. I'm the source and reference. You of course can disagree.

If you don't like this path to end factory farming, you may choose another. However I will fight anyone taking my food away. I will at the same time, help those working towards traditional humane farming methods.

Choose which battle you prefer. One with allies, one with enemies. Decide which will get closer to your current goal, even if it doesn't fully align with mine, and others like me.

Change comes in steps, not leaps.

Recursing•9h ago
> Then be angry at factory farming, not eating meat.

Yes I fully agree with that, you might be interested in this TED talk (linked in my original comment) https://www.ted.com/talks/lewis_bollard_how_to_end_factory_f... for what you can do about it

alexissantos•10h ago
Which life would you choose for yourself? Would you be okay if someone else chose for you, especially if the choice was different?
bbarnett•10h ago
Would you ask an amoeba the same thing? A plant? What about an insect? A mouse? Humans are capable of thought that cows are not. Chickens are not.

For example, cows cannot conceive of object persistence. Human infants do not until 2+ years, some parrots do, etc. So what you have to ask yourself, is would the animals even be aware they are captured? And do they have the intellect to care? Or do they entirely live "in the moment", and thus, are happy if healthy, fed, and not being hunted or fearful of a wolf nearby?

Or maybe you might want to ask yourself, would you prefer to be eaten alive? For an animal like a bison, death seldom comes instantly. Death comes while pieces of your body are ripped off of you, as you mewl and scream and cry and bleed to death slowly. Passing out, waking up again only to see you're still being eaten.

Trying to make a choice based upon your mind, your body, your reality is frankly unfair. An example being, there are pack animals and animals that live solo.

By your metric, that is by measuring happiness for an animal by how you would want to live, you'd take those animals that hate living together, and try to force them to? Because that's what you're asking...

What would I want?

So I ask you instead, if we shouldn't interfere, should we then ensure we don't succor or help wild animals in any way? Let's say we stop eating all meat. We do so because "it's wrong to keep an animal captive, even if they are happier and healthier". OK.

So, then by what metric do we have to help animals in the wild? If they have a plague, should we not care or try to help? We have helped wild animals in the past with such things.

Would the animals understand the question asked? Would a cow understand vaccination? Eradication of bot flies?

fwip•9h ago
Just a quibble - children learn object permanence at around six months of age. Also, I don't think the jury is quite in on cows - I've seen papers that argue both ways.

One way we could quantify cow happiness, if we were interested in doing so, is in the amount of stress hormones they produce.

bbarnett•8h ago
This reminds me of a story, where a utility had buried power lines near a farmer's grazing field. These were milk cows, and he didn't know why but they had stopped giving milk, and seemed sickly.

Vets couldn't figure it out. They seemed healthy otherwise.

Turned out that for some reason, the cows were constantly being low-level shocked.

Most people I know, prefer to think of eating an animal that was happy until it was killed, and killed mercifully. It could be an important metric, much like grass-fed or some other property.

Refreeze5224•6h ago
I think you're missing a key part of the argument. The question is, do you support inflicting excessive suffering on beings that are capable of suffering? Factory farming intentionally forces billions of animals, each capable of feeling pain and suffering, to more of that pain and suffering than is necessary, all in the pursuit of profit.

It is not a question of eating meat or not. It's about inflicting more pain and suffering than is necessary, for money. Some pain and suffering is inevitable for all animals, but there is absolutely no need to add to it because you like the taste of the results.

bbarnett•35m ago
What on earth are you on about? I specifically differentiate between fsctory and traditional farming. I specifically say one is bad the other not.
chimprich•6h ago
> Compare that with protection from predators, medical care, vaccination, shelter, reliable food and clean water, and stress free lives until a quick and fast death.

Comparing farmed animals to wild animals is not really the point. A better comparison is a farmed animal compared to that animal not existing at all. We make the choice to bring them into existence.

Are farmed animals better off existing than not? I think in general the great majority of the 100 billion or so animals we slaughter per year are probably better off not existing. Their lives tend to be short, miserable and pointless.

If you insist on comparing farmed animals to wild animals, though, I don't think it's clear cut. They do live "safer" lives (at least until we kill them, as young as it is economical to do so), but they get to experience severe boredom, curtailment of their natural instincts, and distressing experiences such as separation from their offspring and overcrowding.

dudeofea•4h ago
The same applied to humans before it did to non-human animals. We are prescribing our worldview of "safe" predictable lives to them, just as was done to us.
axus•11h ago
The difference being that enslaved humans actually were equal and are thriving now, the enslaved animal populations will crash when the farming stops. Though better to die free, than live as a slave.
doganugurlu•8h ago
Not sure an individual dying and a whole species dying are quite the same thing.
malcolmgreaves•7h ago
> enslaved humans actually were equal and are thriving now

Not true. Black folk in America are not thriving. The ancestors of the confederates have been working hard for generations.

Imustaskforhelp•11h ago
I actually agree.

I have said this in another comment but I feel like its up to us. Slavery wasn't eradicated suddenly and became suddenly morally bad, I think that slowly but steadily we got better though till the point that now everyone mostly considers slavery morally evil.

Lets hope the same can be the case with animals as well.

I can't emphasize the impact of https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8gqwpfEcBjI&t=25s (earthlings documentary) had on me. I am mostly vegan (well aside from some eggs which I also can easily quit), I highly recommend it.

aksss•5h ago
I believe there are more slaves today than ever in the history of the planet simply due to population growth. While everyone WE know thinks slavery is morally evil, most of the world does not hold that view. In fact, I would say the default human view (looking at all cultures across time memorial) is that slavery is the rule not the exception. That doesn't go away with modernity, it goes away with culture.
flkiwi•4h ago
There’s also a significant conversation about mere illegality and social rejection not actually doing much to address the underlying tendency to exploitation that (a) has prevented reconciliation and relief for formerly enslaved people and their descendants for more than a century and (b) is woven through the labor model common even in the West. Exploited paid laborers aren’t in the same category as enslaved persons, but we shouldn’t fall into the trap of believing that economic injustice has been meaningfully addressed.
ants_everywhere•4h ago
To make room for slavery mentally you have to believe that some people are subhuman or at least beneath the threshold for human rights.

What's surprising to me is that it's become more common to describe people you dislike as subhuman and to for people to support violence or cruelty toward them. Similarly there is a trend to see hatred and anger as positive goods.

squigz•3h ago
Out of curiosity, which parts of the world is actual slavery a normal thing?
econ•3h ago
Depends on how you define it.

If you spend pretty much all waking hours dedicated to some task you don't care about entirely to avoid dire consequences I'd say you are close enough. People might still want to use a different word to describe the same thing but it requires they care more about appearance than substance.

squigz•2h ago
No, you are not close enough. This minimizes the seriousness of actual slavery to an extraordinary degree.
econ•36m ago
It does? In what way?
eaurouge•3h ago
> most of the world does not hold that view

“most” is a lot. Which parts of the world?

> While everyone WE know thinks slavery is morally evil

Who is “we”?

dTal•4h ago
> aside from some eggs which I also can easily quit

Curious why you don't, then. Factory egg production isn't pretty.

NoNameHaveI•11h ago
"Future generations are gonna look back at us for our treatment of animals, especially farmed animals, much the way we look back at our slave owning ancestors." I predict that in the next 100 years, or less, consumption of animal products will be much the same taboo as tobacco consumption (in the USA) is today. Yes, they will still be around, but if you enjoy them openly, you will be a bit of a social pariah in many circles.
lo_zamoyski•8h ago
You can find the abuse of animals morally objectionably (I do), but comparing it to human slavery rests on a grossly false moral equivalence between human beings and other animals. Indeed, it usually rests on sentiment or convention rather than a sound and rationally grounded objective ethics.

Chattel slavery was first and foremost morally objectionable, because human beings have rights that conflict with its practice. Rights are rooted in two properties human beings have, namely, the ability to comprehend one's actions and one's situation, and the ability to freely choose between alternatives. If I can understand my actions and I can freely choose to act one way or another, then I am, in principle [1], a moral agent and thus morally responsible for my actions. But for me to be able to fulfill those responsibilities as a moral agent, certain conditions must be met and this claim on others to supply me with those conditions we call rights. Without those conditions, I cannot do what I have a responsibility to do. Non-human animals [2] lack these properties, which is why we do not hold them morally accountable, and because they don't have responsibilities, they do not have rights. (I realize that it has become customary to pull rights out of thin air without the slightest moral scruple or justification about doing so.)

Of course, it would be morally objectionable for us to torment animals, but we are free to make use of animals in ways that do not contract the human good, rightly understood.

[0] The only sound, objective basis for morality is human nature, which determines what actions accord with it and which contradict it. So, it is morally objectionable to torment animals, even though they have no rights, because - in short - it contradicts human nature and thus my good as a human being. Sadism is a serious defect.

[1] I say "in principle", because in practice, as you'll recall, mens rea has legal significance for a reason. If I kill someone by accident, then I did not choose freely to kill him, and so I have not committed murder, only involuntary manslaughter or whatever. If I kill someone, because I believed he was a monster from the 7th dimension trying to kill me, then I did not comprehend my situation and thus the nature of my action. So, in practice, I may fail to exercise what in principle I have the power to do by virtue of my nature as a human being. But other animals do not have this power by nature.

[2] To preempt the inevitable petty drive-by pedant, I define "human" as any animal with these two properties, so according to this view, an intelligent alien from another planet would also be human, despite occupying a place in a separate phylogenetic tree or whatever.

jmdeon•8h ago
It sounds like you're conflating legal arguments with moral ones. You're saying animals lack rights so it's morally okay to enslave/make use of them?

I'd argue it's much baser than that. Animals have feelings and often feel very bad when kept in enslaved conditions. Since humans can understand the pain they inflict on enslaved animals, then it's wrong of us to continue enslaving them when we have alternatives that are just as healthy for us, if not more healthy.

I would also say your assumption that pigs do not comprehend their actions and cannot choose between alternatives is false.

fkyoureadthedoc•7h ago
> [2] To preempt the inevitable petty drive-by pedant, I define "human" as any animal with these two properties, so according to this view, an intelligent alien from another planet would also be human, despite occupying a place in a separate phylogenetic tree or whatever.

Your alien might have some 3rd property that you do not, and thus may farm you.

A future AI that can produce and consume the sum total of all recorded human knowledge within the amount of time that you have a single thought will likely have many emergent properties that you do not, and thus may farm you as well.

> Indeed, it usually rests on sentiment or convention rather than a sound and rationally grounded objective ethics.

Your whole argument rests on sentiment and convention, and would have been summarily rejected by the slave owner based on his own.

MagicMoonlight•8h ago
30 million years in and vegans still haven’t won. Why do you expect that to change?
gs17•6h ago
30 million years of what? Go back a few centuries and you could say the same statement about slavery, since all of civilization is a rounding error on tens of millions of years.
malcolmgreaves•7h ago
> Future generations are gonna look back at us for our treatment of animals, especially farmed animals, much the way we look back at our slave owning ancestors.

Absolutely not.

People are so much more important than pigs. Or dogs. Or any other animal.

This isn’t a comparison a rational, empathetic person would make.

MyOutfitIsVague•6h ago
Most rational, empathetic people generally look down on animal abuse and animal torture. Humans are more important than any other animal to me, but it's not a total dichotomy that makes the suffering of all other thinking, feeling animals meaningless.

Very few rational, empathetic people would be entirely unmoved by their pet dog being killed, and are more than a little perturbed imagining farming dogs for meat like we do other animals, despite the fact that cows and pigs do have feelings, do suffer, do play and have social bonds, and do have similar levels of intelligence to dogs.

We're fortunate enough that we only have one species of human around to worry about. Imagine the political turmoil if we still had many different human species in modern society and had to deal with this kind of debate.

ultrarunner•3h ago
It's already happening. A story about mistreatment of a dog garners reactions like "how can someone act like that to a fur-baby". Same action toward a person and it's elided over as baseline expected violence. By the same token, quasi-deification of animals has happened for a very long time, and all it takes is a mutation of this idea to spread across popular culture.
rafark•6h ago
> Future generations are gonna look back at us for our treatment of animals, especially farmed animals, much the way we look back at our slave owning ancestors.

A lot of people already do.

Hopefully technology (robots) and science (lab grown meat) can accelerate this.

elif•6h ago
Yo I've been a vegan for over 30 years and personally I wish that were true, but honestly I don't see groupthink on this topic ever shifting substantially.

Ideology which confirms ones desires are stronger than socially collective cerebralization about theoretical ideals.

I actually think AI will be granted empathy far sooner than animals simply due to its ability to speak and thus engage in the ideological layer.

dudeofea•4h ago
Cultures that have many offspring usually care less about animal welfare (human and non-human) than those that have less offspring.

Cultures that have many offspring usually become the dominant culture of future generations.

Unless something catastrophic happens, I don't see how you can be right and I can be wrong.

wingtw•2h ago
hm, if i understand you correctly (non-native speaker here) you are advocating for plant based diet - and if thats the case, I don't agree with you. It might be possible to live on plant based diet in Mediterranean, but here up north where i reside (and even further in Arctic) it is, I think, next to impossible to survive only on plants - human body, afaik, cannot get everything that is needed in this environment, purely from plants. Taking maybe a very graphic example to get the point across - Eskimos did not learn to hunt whales (which was and is for them very dangerous) for fun but to survive - to counter the cold you need to consume more calories than you can get from (with reasonable amounts of) plants. (of course in arctic, theres whole another issue of growing anything ). Ofc one might say that in today's world everything can be flown in, supplements can be taken - but what's the cost ? to the body, to the environment where the plants/supplements are manufactured...?
katbyte•2h ago
No just that factory farming animals maybe shouldn’t be allowed. I have no problem with eating free range animals that live outside and are humanly treated and slaughtered even if the price goes up. I do have a problem with animal abuse which factory farming is.
PeterStuer•12h ago
I would venture history explains the difference.

Cats were traditionally used for pest control, their main value being their living activity, and these days mostly bred to be cute house companions. Pigs otoh were traditionally used as a protein source, their main value being their well fed carcass, and today still bred mainly to produce delicious bacon.

I think most people neither wish cats, pigs, or any other animal cruel treatment, and that goes for non-vegetarians as well. I do agree most unsavory maltreatment practices do not get the attention they deserve.

Thorrez•11h ago
People have been charged/convicted of torturing chickens:

https://whyy.org/articles/upper-darby-pennsylvania-sentenced...

https://www.wave3.com/2023/04/25/man-accused-abusing-chicken...

I believe the difference is if you're causing the animals pain because you enjoy the pain itself vs causing the animals pain to provide food.

deepvibrations•11h ago
Knowing this, is there are a reason why you Aren't vegan?
harimau777•10h ago
Not the OP, but:

I try to minimize the amount of meat that I eat; however, at this time I don't think that veganism is a viable strategy for optimal health for most Americans. That's particularly the case for athletes. It's simply too difficult to get enough protein and minimize carbs on a plant based diet.

That's not to say that it's impossible. I have a friend who is a vegan bodybuilder but it requires a lot of extra work on her part. That extra work is a big ask for people who are just trying to hold their lives together.

Zooming out from food, there isn't a widely available alternative to leather or wool if you care about the textile's performance (strength, durability, insulation when wet, flame retardation, etc.). That's particularly true if you care about avoiding petrochemicals.

ultrarunner•3h ago
What athletics do you participate in, and what are your macro targets?
harimau777•10h ago
I am 100% against mistreating any animals and especially animals as intelligent as pigs.

However, I can understand why people don't think of pigs as highly as cats & dogs considering how dirty they are. I don't mean the rolling around in mud thing; that's just a logical way to cool off. Instead I mean the fact that they will apparently eat almost anything including feces and other pigs.

Edit: Just to be clear, I realize that's not a rational reason to think poorly of pigs. I'm just saying that I can understand why people feel that way.

dspillett•8h ago
> the difference in how we see cats and pigs

Even before we bred much larger pigs, there was far more meat on them, and they were far easier to corral. It comes down to those efficiencies rather than any moralising about the intelligence and awareness of the animals.

As an animal lover, particularly cats, and active member of People Eating Tasty Animals, I don't have a problem with cultures that eat animals we consider pets, as I know the pigs and cows I eat are more intelligent than many are comfortable thinking. My concern is how the animals are treated before being food which comes down to the factory farming debate and similar: a life of torture before being eaten compared to a life of care before being eaten.

pryelluw•3h ago
Futurama gets it once again. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Problem_with_Popplers
throawayonthe•15h ago
are there places where it's illegal to kill cats? i know there are cruelty laws, but afaik in most places you are allowed to kill animals "humanely"
hnbad•14h ago
If you want to be this pedantic, killing humans is technically legal in every country that has soldiers and law enforcement officers.
throawayonthe•12h ago
i do mean by civillians
modo_mario•11h ago
>China lacks animal welfare laws to protect these cats

Does it? I remember a lot of outrage on reddit about people that would supposedly be banned from having pets due to low social credit score. Turns out the article was a complete lie and there was just a law introduced that made banning someone from having pets for a specified time a punishment that could be dished out. Specifically in the case of someone convicted for animal abuse.

rsynnott•6h ago
That's a fairly weak punishment, tho.
none2585•11h ago
Tangential but related - shout-out to nodogsleftbehind.com which is a nonprofit designed to save dogs from cruel treatment and the meat market in China.
moron4hire•8h ago
I was confused by how that might be possible, because I first assumed this would have been something like how the SPCA or animal rescue shelters work in the US, where there would be a central location where the animals are handled and processed. But I'm getting the impression that these are automated boxes that are placed in-situ in cities?
varispeed•1h ago
If they neuter all stray cats, they will end up with no cats. Then they'll end up with mice.
magzter•16h ago
Well I certainly got sucked in by some cats staring at the camera with an empty bowl, got me buying them kibble.
KolibriFly•13h ago
It feels like such a natural next step
MarsIronPI•6h ago
This is brilliant marketing. Buy food for the hungry cat! Whoever came up with this idea is genius.
Edd314159•16h ago
The Purrrr app (which shows feeders like this) is really quite an experience. It’s just as hyperactive as a Temu or AliExpress, with as much dopamine hacking as a TikTok, but… for good? I think?
Cthulhu_•14h ago
I just opened one up, two cats were waiting patiently, food came out, one cat hissed at the other and started eating. Very cat.
tantomile•14h ago
this is what the internet is for.
eknkc•14h ago
This seems like a great program!

Small anectode;

My wife runs a cafe in Ankara, Turkey. A week after opening a random cat walked in and claimed one of the chairs.

We started feeding him. Then another walked in... We left a large automated feeder outside and started spaying / neutering, vaccinating, deworming them. I think we neutered close to 20-30 cats. A couple needed medical intervention (broken limbs, infections etc). And 2 I had to put down because they were too far gone. This effort alone put the neighborhood kitten population in control.

The place was aimed at health conscious / vegan people so the theme fit with cats hanging around.

It is really emotionally and financially draining to do these things. I've been fortunate enough to fund everything myself but I assume it is hard when scale grows larger and there is not enough help.

throw-the-towel•13h ago
Classic Turkey.
Gethsemane•13h ago
A highlight of my time in Turkey was the cats - thank you for your efforts! Antalya had a lot of cat hotels in the park and most looked very healthy.
frm88•10h ago
There is an excellent documentary about cats in Istanbul: Kedi https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kedi_(2016_film). A full version of the movie can be found on YouTube premium.
Samin100•3h ago
Thank you for your efforts!
rsynnott•13h ago
Oh, wow, there's a whole mythos: https://streetcat.wiki/index.php/The_Exploration_Era
thenthenthen•13h ago
WOW this is amazing! There are many of these ‘smart kitty houses’ in my Shanghai neighbourhood!
ge96•12h ago
Ahhh history back button but love it
virajk_31•12h ago
This is Meowlsome!! haha
AfterHIA•12h ago
What is going on good cats! Mah kittahs; you are some good ass men I am thinking. :3
chakintosh•11h ago
hehe Catroulette
mayo369•11h ago
As a Chinese I'm amazed that this app is totally unknown in China but get popular in HN
williamharwell•11h ago
Mr. Sweetpea has ants in his food
williamharwell•10h ago
Mr. Sweetpea has ants in his food.
xrd•10h ago
How is this surviving the HN hug of death?

Why is this not bigger than skibidi toilet? I have three kids, two girls and one boy. My son loves skibidi toilet, but my girls outnumber him and they've NEVER told me about this.

blamazon•10h ago
GIFs or screenshots from this are ubiquitous in meme culture in areas of the net I frequent. There's one I'm thinking of where the cat looks suspiciously at the camera.
MarsIronPI•6h ago
Might we know what these areas are?
minihoot•10h ago
Because skibidi toilet is extremely stimulating and has stuff happening 24/7. This just has cats eating food. (which personally as an autistic person makes me bounce in my seat)
catlover13000•1h ago
believe it or not there was a massive surge in popularity in 2024 when mr fresh still visited the happy canteen so they had time to prepare lol.
tiagod•10h ago
Flipped to the second camera, and there's a hedgehog eating all the food!

https://imgur.com/MIcjP4a

EDIT: And now, what appears to be a Siberian weasel?

https://imgur.com/3oZpZpK

Levitating•4h ago
Found another case at "Coal Ball (Eat Enough Every Day)" https://0x0.st/KQsT.png
harimau777•10h ago
In one of the feeds (Mr. Fall) the cat is eating what looks like soap shavings or feathers or something. They apprear to be fairly light weight since the cat appears to be sort of licking them up. Any idea what they are?
IAmBroom•9h ago
Dehydrated chicken?
CryptoBanker•7h ago
This is an interesting cat (as of 11:48 ET) https://meow.camera/#5087297507386435431
RRRA•7h ago
Jenny Cam has evolved so much
MarsIronPI•7h ago
Cool project! The post title is not at all clear though. Maybe it could be clarified?
jarek83•6h ago
POV: A bird's last view before being eaten by them
nullable_bool•3h ago
Lucky 7-Eleven II is one weirrrrdd looking cat.
catlover13000•1h ago
hello from the community! happy canteen gets a lot of food so if you want to donate i recommend checking out the less popular feeders. it is the most popular because mr fresh the meme cat who was adopted originated from there.

for those worried about the kitties every feeder has a different caretaker and some are more involved than others. from what ive seen a majority of the popular ones have either a dedicated caretaker or are involved with some business. unfortunately, you may come across feeders where the cats arent as cared for or where the caretaker lacks the funds to do so. to help with this the purrr app (where english speaking users can feed them) has a fund option where instead of feeding, you can support TNR or wellness treatments!

catlover13000•1h ago
i forgot to mention these feeders just began entering the U.S. this year. there are several located in shelters and have helped many homeless cats find owners! hopefully they will continue to spread and help in communities that have stray cat problems
thr0w__4w4y•51m ago
I noticed all the feeders seem to be similar / same. I'm in California, I feed 3 strays in an area where the average outdoor cat's lifespan is about 4.5 years (fires, traffic, hawks, coyotes, evil people).

Right now my process is very manual but it's a labor of love. All 3 cats only show up after dark. Ring stick up camera, bowls out (clean them every day), run out on a motion alert, etc. problem is I also have racoons, opposssums and skunks. (I'm not in L.A. highrises, I'm close to the ocean).

Where can such feeders now be purchased (US customer). Thank you!