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Stealth BGP Hijacks with URPF Filtering [pdf]

https://www.usenix.org/system/files/woot25-schulmann.pdf
1•krizhanovsky•3m ago•1 comments

Baby Map

https://neal.fun/baby-map/
1•hybridtupel•3m ago•0 comments

Show HN: I turned the Namib Desert livestream into my macOS screensaver

https://github.com/hauxir/macos-live-screensaver
1•hauxir•7m ago•1 comments

Future Nostalgia: Safeguarding the knowledge of floppy disks

https://www.lib.cam.ac.uk/future-nostalgia
1•oldnetguy•8m ago•1 comments

HTML Modals

https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Reference/Elements/dialog
2•nivethan•9m ago•0 comments

Create your own macOS application installer

https://github.com/doroved/mac-installer
1•doroved•10m ago•0 comments

A bed stops working because of an Amazon outage

https://twitter.com/internetofshit/status/1980505898088034704
1•turrini•10m ago•0 comments

We are introducing the world's first all in one Finance tracker WealthAI

https://wealth-ai.in/
1•asaws•12m ago•0 comments

StarGrid: A Brand-New Palm OS Strategy Game in 2025

https://quarters.captaintouch.com/blog/posts/2025-10-21-stargrid-has-arrived,-a-brand-new-palm-os...
2•capitain•13m ago•0 comments

Asterisk

https://cormullion.github.io/pages/2020-10-09-asterisk/
1•fanf2•13m ago•0 comments

The Crew 2 Hybrid Mode is now available

https://www.ubisoft.com/en-us/game/the-crew/the-crew-2/news-updates/zs6ZFyLEQvKbFskEJZolR/the-cre...
1•silverf1sh•14m ago•0 comments

Open-lmake: A generic, fearless build system for Linux

https://github.com/cesar-douady/open-lmake
1•Uriopass•16m ago•0 comments

I discovered a new mathematical relation "alien" (⍊)

1•DenisDolya•16m ago•0 comments

Tesla is heading into multi-billion-dollar iceberg of its own making

https://electrek.co/2025/10/20/tesla-heading-into-multi-billion-dollar-iceberg-of-own-making/
7•ndsipa_pomu•16m ago•0 comments

Dark Reader – Support Us

https://darkreader.org/support-us/#pay
2•behnamoh•17m ago•1 comments

Get Install Size of a Package with Pacman and Apt

https://nickjanetakis.com/blog/get-install-size-of-a-package-with-pacman-and-apt
1•groseje•18m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Markethunt – I built a database to find growing, overlooked markets

https://markethunt.io
2•moudah•19m ago•0 comments

Unified Gravito-Electromagnetic Resonance (UGER) Model

https://github.com/olect/uger
1•olect•19m ago•0 comments

Standardized Definition of AI Governance

https://github.com/russell-parrott/Standardized-Definition-of-AI-Governance
1•Lio•20m ago•0 comments

Prisoner hacks prison IT system, goes wild

https://news.risky.biz/risky-bulletin-prisoner-hacks-prison-it-system-goes-wild/
1•aa_is_op•20m ago•0 comments

Show HN: NewsletterStack – Discover the tools behind successful newsletters

https://www.newsletterstack.co
1•zackho•28m ago•0 comments

Automation with AI voice agents handling inbound and outbound calls

1•Olivia8•29m ago•0 comments

Sam Altman Tied Tech's Biggest Players to OpenAI

https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/sam-altman-open-ai-nvidia-deals-d10a6525
1•pondsider•30m ago•0 comments

Forging Fedora's Future with Forgejo

https://communityblog.fedoraproject.org/forging-fedoras-future-with-forgejo/
3•todsacerdoti•32m ago•0 comments

Progress update on Clang's new constant expression interpreter

https://developers.redhat.com/articles/2025/10/15/clang-bytecode-interpreter-update
1•jmillikin•35m ago•0 comments

DevOps – Thank You

https://oneuptime.com/blog/post/2025-10-21-ode-to-devops-heroes/view
1•ndhandala•37m ago•0 comments

The Internet Must Decentralize

https://oneuptime.com/blog/post/2025-10-21-the-internet-must-decentralize/view
1•ndhandala•37m ago•0 comments

Show HN: City-aware PTO optimizer with block/prefer day constraints

https://somniaplanner.com/en/
2•mabolivar•38m ago•0 comments

A Plan-Do-Check-Act Framework for AI Code Generation – InfoQ

https://www.infoq.com/articles/PDCA-AI-code-generation/
1•rbanffy•39m ago•0 comments

Diamond Thermal Conductivity: A New Era in Chip Cooling

https://spectrum.ieee.org/diamond-thermal-conductivity
1•rbanffy•39m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

AI Weiwei: What I Wish I Had Known About Germany Earlier

https://hyperallergic.com/1050197/what-i-wish-i-had-known-about-germany-earlier/
44•kome•1h ago

Comments

cluckindan•1h ago
”AI” Weiwei…?
taneq•1h ago
It’s the name of the author.
vessenes•1h ago
I think it's a subtle request to spell it properly capitalized (at least in English): Ai Weiwei
taneq•1h ago
Aaah right gotchya.
cluckindan•1h ago
No, the author’s name is Ai, not AI like in the title. HN auto-editorializing the capitalization?
demetrius•1h ago
But the capitalisation is unexpected.

While sometimes people use all-caps for family names (I think it’s French tradition?), I think it looks quite out-of-place and confusing in this case.

rkomorn•1h ago
We usually only do that in stuff like records, on envelopes, on forms, etc.

Pretty rare to do it in media.

kome•1h ago
that's HN's automatic editing for you.
bryanrasmussen•1h ago
probably should edit the author's name, but it is a pretty good article, also I find it applies to a lot of countries on the Germanic model.
Propelloni•1h ago
Yeah, I liked it. Pretty aphorims in Goethe's style with wide applicability. If the article had another title and no "Additional" I would not have guessed he was talking about Germany specifically.

Fun fact: I used to work with lots of Chinese people, two decades ago and mostly in France, and they loved the Chinese restaurants there. If we went out, we always went to one of the many Chinese outlets. Supposedly they were so deliciously different from food at home ;)

lmf4lol•1h ago
What a disgraceful cover photo. Not everything is perfect in Germany, on the contrary. But that goes for every country on earth. But a middlefinger to the Bundestag? It's disrespectful to the German people as a whole...
vessenes•1h ago
If the picture offends you, just wait until you read the essay.
lmf4lol•1h ago
The essay is fine and has some truth in it. I don't fully agree with it though.
nosianu•1h ago
As a German, I could not care less about such things, and I would claim that in that respect I'm rather typical. Such a non-issue.
carlmr•1h ago
Also German here, if you've worked through our robotic bureaucracy you know that there is some valid criticism here.

Germany is criticized all the time. You can read it, you can ignore it, you can disagree with parts of it, but I don't think anybody should be above criticism. Lest they think they might be #1 in everything.

36280132928226•1h ago
Since 77% are discontent with the current government, I doubt you would find many that would be offended.

https://de.statista.com/statistik/daten/studie/2953/umfrage/...

Propelloni•1h ago
Only being discontent is too easy. What do they agree upon?
vermilingua•1h ago
> The Germans might be the only people who are truly the furthest from a sense of humor. This could be the result of their deep reverence for rationality. Just look at Berlin Airport or the advertisements for Mercedes-Benz cars — you start to feel that their lack of humor has become a kind of immense humor in itself.
bloak•1h ago
Germans definitely do have a sense of humour. They're not much different from the English in that respect. I'm not sure about Mercedes drivers, though.
flowerthoughts•4m ago
> The Germans might be the only people who are truly the furthest from a sense of humor.

Of course there's only one people furthest away from anything. Jeez.

> Mercedes-Benz cars

You'd also sober up if you saw the bill for taking your Mercedes ownership lightly.

hmmmcurious1•1h ago
Sounds like Japan actually. All highly regimented societies are alike and can be very successful when the laws and incentives are aligned or a total disaster otherwise
pols45•49m ago
Germany/Japan/Taiwan/South Korea are all easy targets cause they are all examples of compressed modernity post WW2 (their rebuild and trajectory was decided not by locals but by the hegemon).

Rate of economic change happened faster than the natural rate of change society, politics, culture could handle.

redprince•18m ago
Just out of curiosity: How exactly do you imagine Germany looked like pre-WW2?
romankolpak•1h ago
Comes to germany, does not like it, makes a picture of a middle finger to Bundestag. This smells like ragebait low effort content I come to HN in order to avoid!
pimeys•57m ago
And in many ways it reflects well to us who also moved here for work and witness similar issues in the society.

There are a lot of good things too in Germany, but he really nailed on the issues I witness in my daily life.

readthenotes1•10m ago
Perhaps It reminds me of commentary of 1900 Germany in the book _3 Men in a Bummel_.

And "When the majority believe they live in a free society, it is often a sign that the society is not free. "

Is a pertinent observation

thenaturalist•1m ago
While I chuckle at the fact Ai Weiwei choose to dump on Germany while enjoying unbothered refuge here, this sentence I disliked the most.

It reeks of over-thinking, philosophical elitism.

As someone who was raised by parents born in Communist Romania, talk to anyone born in an Authoritarian regime and they’ll tell you what the absence of freedom means like.

When it comes to assessing freedom, I’d stick closer to German-Romanian literature Nobel prize winner Hertha Müller.

Coincidentally, just like Ai Wewei she’s been living here in Berlin and seems not to feel particularly unfree.

MikeDods•1h ago
AI Weiwei is such a crybaby. Is he seriously offended because for once one of his thoughts is not published in the biggest newspaper?

The times ive heard about him or have involuntarily had too see his art because of his astroturfed hype, this is hard to seriously

Maybe chill out for a while and pay your taxes while you are at it

MarcusE1W•1h ago
What does he say? He does not like a few things. Germany is bureaucratic, look at that. Something with reflection that does not further gets explained. No solutions on offer, of course. Some stereotypes feel like they are true. Well, well, what an insight.

He does not like some food, but likes others.

But the best bit is: Germans (the way he writes it, all Germans) have no humor.

Reads like a rant. He probably feels enraged that the f%*king establishment dares to offer him money. He is an artist. And then they have the audacity not to publish his master piece rant.

I mean, it's the expression of a personal view, that's fine. But I can see why newspapers did not want to print it. Not much there, really.

MrBuddyCasino•1h ago
One thing is for sure, he is not a gifted writer.
Etheryte•1h ago
Maybe the author does have some interesting things to say, after all there's many things one could pick at when considering any country, but the writing style is beyond obnoxious. Nearly every paragraph is one or two sentences, tops. It feels like reading a series of tweets, rather than coherent thought.
vermilingua•1h ago
From the first paragraph of the article: “editor Elisa Pfleger, through our gallery, invited me to contribute 15–20 short reflections on the prompt “What I would have liked to know about Germany earlier””
wave84•1h ago
As an art afficionado, I must note that Ai Weiwei is one of the greatest living artist of our times. His works are showcased all over the world. Also, he is a prominent critic of the Chinese government and now lives in exile, after being imprisoned by the Chinese authorities. All that should be taken into account and his article not so easily dismissed, despite the apparent "ragebait" that some commenters have noticed. His lens of the world if probably much denser and refined than most of us will ever hope to achieve. And yes, I believe the essence of the article is correct - I can sense a decline in the West overall that I have a hard time putting into words.
mrtksn•1h ago
Sounds like somebody went to some other peoples place and was disappointed that the place isn't functioning like the place they came from or the way they imagined it. Turks are having this all the time for example, they are disappointed that Europe isn't just like rich neighborhood of Istanbul.

Very typical for people who have a stylized mental model of a place based on rumors and memes. Unlike for people with clean slate, they tend to be very aggressively sticking to their wrong ideas and attempt to transform it instead of building it from scratch. You can see very wrong interpretations based on layers and layers of misunderstanding and fantasies. Can be easily detected if the person speaks about the locals as if they are a different species, which is different than making an observation of the psyche.

You can see it in people who think that in US the poor straight up die when get sick or Americans who think that in Europe no one works, live off on museum tickets revenues.

It sounds like a rant of an immigrant going through the stages of adaptation(admiration->confusion->disillusionment->anger->understanding->making peace).

jzellis•9m ago
In America the poor do straight up die when they get sick. I'm an American who wrote a book about medical tourism who now lives in the UK partially because healthcare is affordable and available here.

And I like Berlin personally, but I'd probably like it better if it actually was like the Sultanahmet district in Istanbul. Then I wouldn't have to go to the Turkish neighborhoods to find the best food when I visited there (sausages and pastries, as Weiwei says, being the exception). :-D

mcwhy•1h ago
westerners often have these idealized images of opposition leaders in authoritarian regimes when in reality they are the same products with a different paint. Navalny, Aung San Suu Kyi, Machado and all the others.
Mordisquitos•1h ago
I must say, regardless of whether his criticisms of German culture and society are justified or not, it is no surprise to me that Zeitmagazin rejected his proposal, them having requested a column titled 'What I would have liked to know about Germany earlier'. The text as written by Ai Weiwei does not even make an effort to follow the prompt, but rather is simply a rant on implied problems that he sees in Germany.

Did Ai Weiwei not already 'know' each of the general aphorisms he wrote in his article? What is specific to Germany about his critique and not, say, to his native China or to any other country? Why would he have 'liked to know' about these things earlier, and what impact would it have had on his life or his decisions?

redprince•2m ago
The text he wrote makes a lot of sense under that prompt because that prompt provides the frame under which to read it. This makes it obvious that his general observations happen to apply to Germany. Apparently he wasn't aware of this until living there.

The real issue for non-publication is the one he cites: "additional reflections in a more personal and light-hearted tone". This matches the general type of content in Zeit Magazin. They weren't looking for scathing criticism of societal ills but some entertaining piece that goes well with the other easily digestible articles.

carlosjobim•1h ago
Germany is not the only society which is like this. But there is one difference I've noticed lately:

When you read online commenters from Nordic countries, they are usually against this oppressive mindset described in the article, and ashamed for that aspect of their country. Under the guise of online anonymity, the dissenters are greater than the system loyalists. Or maybe they are even system loyalists blowing off steam.

However, Germans I see online - even under the guise of anonymity - will strongly defend and support their system. Are the German dissenters all offline, or are they way fewer than in other similar countries?

FinnLobsien•35m ago
My take having grown up in Germany: Germany has risen to one of the world's top economies with products known for precision manufacturing, exacting standards and a general assumption that "We do things the right way".

So Germans became convinced they know the exactly correct way to do things because that's how they became the top of the world. So now that things are getting worse (economy, housing etc.), many Germans are convinced they just need a bit more of the exactly correct way to do things.

The same perfectionist mindset that lets you manufacture some of the world's best physical products is the mindset that makes it impossible for the government to use the internet.

TMWNN•16m ago
>However, Germans I see online - even under the guise of anonymity - will strongly defend and support their system. Are the German dissenters all offline, or are they way fewer than in other similar countries?

I've heard it said that the idea that Germans are efficient is a myth. (The new Berlin airport is one example.)

Germans are, rather, *rule followers*.

steanne•49m ago
the picture is a play on/update of https://www.moma.org/collection/works/117098
comrade1234•35m ago
I was talking to a German engineer that moved to here (Switzerland) for work. At some point he had to register his car for Switzerland, transferring it from Germany. He thought the process would be like in Germany and would take hours so he took a half-day off work. Ends up it was just a few minutes of someone stamping some paper and printing his new car registration...