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Better Than JSON?

https://wiki.alopex.li/BetterThanJson
1•fanf2•2m ago•0 comments

„There will be no federal bailout for AI."

https://twitter.com/DavidSacks/status/1986476840207122440
1•smartmic•2m ago•0 comments

Who's watching the watchers? This Mozilla fellow and her Surveillance Watch map

https://www.theregister.com/2025/11/08/mozilla_fellow_al_shafei/
1•mmooss•3m ago•0 comments

Even malware is using LLMs to rewrite its code, says Google

https://www.pcgamer.com/software/ai/great-now-even-malware-is-using-llms-to-rewrite-its-code-says...
1•AznHisoka•3m ago•0 comments

The Florentine Diamond Resurfaces After 100 Years in Hiding

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/06/arts/design/florentine-diamond-resurfaces-hapsburg.html
1•gmays•5m ago•0 comments

USPS Media Mail Rules Are Arbitrary and Stupid

http://nerdlypleasures.blogspot.com/2025/11/usps-media-mail-rules-are-arbitrary-and.html
1•HotGarbage•5m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Code Typer – a type racer for programmers (with cool IDE-like behavior)

https://github.com/mattiacerutti/code-typer
1•mattcer•7m ago•0 comments

How to declutter, quiet down, and take the AI out of Windows 11 25H2

https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2025/11/what-i-do-to-clean-up-a-clean-install-of-windows-11-23h2-...
1•mariuz•7m ago•0 comments

Nation-state hackers deliver malware from "bulletproof" blockchains

https://arstechnica.com/security/2025/10/hackers-bullet-proof-hosts-deliver-malware-from-blockcha...
2•PaulHoule•9m ago•1 comments

Tehran Is at Risk of Running Out of Water Within Weeks

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/26/world/middleeast/iran-water-crisis-drought.html
1•baxtr•11m ago•1 comments

Ups and FedEx Ground MD-11 Cargo Planes After Louisville Crash

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/08/us/ups-fedex-cargo-planes-grounded.html
1•FigurativeVoid•11m ago•0 comments

What Hallucinogens Will Make You See

https://nautil.us/what-hallucinogens-will-make-you-see-308247/
1•simonebrunozzi•12m ago•0 comments

Show HN: I built a website to visualize company financial data

https://myfinsight.com/
1•eadanlin•13m ago•0 comments

Understanding the CUDA Compiler and PTX with a Top-K Kernel

https://blog.alpindale.net/posts/top_k_cuda/
1•mfiguiere•14m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Launch coding agents from Apple Watch

https://whispermemos.com/kb/integrations/cursor-agents
3•Void_•18m ago•0 comments

AWS and OpenAI announce multi-year, $38B strategic partnership

https://www.aboutamazon.com/news/aws/aws-open-ai-workloads-compute-infrastructure
1•zkmon•24m ago•0 comments

I vibe coded a database engine from scratch

https://deepwiki.com/jzombie/rust-llkv
1•rustic-indian•24m ago•0 comments

Why The Simpsons couldn't survive the new millennium (2017)

https://honisoit.com/2017/03/why-the-simpsons-couldnt-survive-the-new-millennium/
1•haunter•24m ago•1 comments

Cortex Linux – AI-Native Operating System (Open Source)

https://github.com/cortexlinux/cortex
1•AIVH•26m ago•2 comments

Space Type Generator

https://spacetypegenerator.com/
1•bookofjoe•27m ago•0 comments

Flooded UK coalmines could provide low-carbon cheap heat 'for generations'

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/nov/06/flooded-uk-coalmines-low-carbon-cheap-heat
6•rmason•29m ago•1 comments

ASD – Barriers and Pathways in Formal and Self-Diagnosis

https://codeberg.org/alicewatson/asd-self-dx/src/branch/main
1•ofcrpls•32m ago•0 comments

Beauty Backfire Effect: How Extreme Attractiveness Undermines Fitfluencers

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/mar.70023
2•gnabgib•36m ago•0 comments

Art-Sci Currents. Interdisciplinarity in MOTION. (url to video series)

https://crearte.ca/artscicurrents/interviews/
1•sargstuff•38m ago•1 comments

Best Current Practice for OAuth 2.0 Security

https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc9700
3•mooreds•43m ago•0 comments

Humans have remote touch 'seventh sense' like sandpipers

https://techxplore.com/news/2025-11-humans-remote-seventh-sandpipers.html
12•wjSgoWPm5bWAhXB•43m ago•4 comments

I've found the secret to a happy relationship: an 'airport divorce'

https://www.thetimes.com/travel/inspiration/comment-inspiration/airport-divorce-travel-trend-huw-...
1•mooreds•44m ago•1 comments

Thoughts by a non-economist on AI and economics

https://windowsontheory.org/2025/11/04/thoughts-by-a-non-economist-on-ai-and-economics/
1•mooreds•44m ago•0 comments

Whitespace Esolang

https://esolangs.org/wiki/Whitespace
1•OptionX•44m ago•0 comments

'Nestflix': Peregrine falcon livestream has Australians glued to their screens

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c5yp6m8y764o
2•dijksterhuis•48m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Facebook enables gender discrimination in job ads, European human rights rules

https://www.cnn.com/2025/02/28/tech/facebook-gender-discrimination-europe-ruling-asequals-intl
58•Bender•2h ago

Comments

amelius•1h ago
Title is incorrect: human rights body
macintux•40m ago
Unless it has changed, the max character length on a submission title is 80 characters, which this matches exactly. I assume "body" was dropped to make it fit.
JuniperMesos•55m ago
> The Netherlands Institute for Human Rights said in a February 18 decision that Facebook’s algorithm reinforced gender stereotypes by mainly showing “typically female professions” to female Facebook users in the Netherlands and that Meta (META), the social platform’s owner, should have monitored and adjusted its algorithm to prevent that.

> For example, ads for mechanic positions were predominantly shown to men, while those for preschool teacher roles were primarily directed to women. Global Witness said its experiments in the Netherlands, France, India, Ireland, the United Kingdom and South Africa demonstrated that the algorithm perpetuated similar biases around the world. The non-profit’s investigation led to four complaints from the Dutch human rights group Bureau Clara Wichmann and the French organization Fondation des Femmes.

I don't think any of this should be illegal. I don't think anyone is meaningfully harmed by being algorithmically shown job ads stereotypical of one gender rather than another, and I have no problem with any organization at all that does this, whether it's Meta or anyone else. I do not agree with the position of any of these European human rights organizations, and I'd probably be in favor of reforming French anti-discrimination law to explicitly legalize what Meta is doing here.

paperhatwriter•45m ago
Can you explain why you think this?
cm2012•30m ago
The algorithm is responding to people's revealed preferences in what job ads they want to see
hydrogen7800•25m ago
All discrimination can be described as "revealed preference". A very convenient way of ignoring systemic harm.
fastball•19m ago
The onus needs to be on convincingly demonstrating the alleged systemic harm. Until then, "revealed preference" is a sufficient explanation.
hydrogen7800•1m ago
Are you saying the harm from gender-based employment discrimination needs to be demonstrated, or that harm from facebook's permitting of that discrimination needs to be demonstrated?
billy99k•11m ago
If a company gets 0% response from a certain group, why should they have to pay for ads, when the likelihood they will find a candidate is next to nothing?

This also only ever goes in one direction. A friend of mine works for a company run by and employs 100% women.

In any other context, it would be illegal. Instead, it's considered 'diverse' and 'empowering'.

Based on statistics alone, it's obvious the company is hiring women based on choice.

Tech companies, like Duo, touted the fact that they had all women development teams a few years back. When discrimination like this is an accepted practice, I stop listening.

inglor_cz•2m ago
You can always claim harm, but proving it is a different story.

Policies like that are based on results of psychological research such as "stereotype threat", which has recently fallen victim to the reproducibility crisis.

In other words, the entire social engineering structure of such laws may be a house built on sand.

Alex2037•1m ago
again, these are ads. not job postings, job ads. it's not "harmful" to enable advertisers to choose which audiences to target.
wiseowise•18m ago
How far are you willing to stretch this? What about skin color? Nationality? Religion?
mustyoshi•5m ago
Not the guy you're responding to but I'm not going to willingly pay money for pork rind ads to be shown to Muslims. In fact I'd go so far as to suggest that should be illegal as a hate crime.
flir•34s ago
I'd bet a chunk of cash that it's segmenting people. And the "gender A" segment are seeing the ads that are popular with the "gender B" segment at a far lower rate, or not at all.

So no, it's not an individual's revealed preferences, it's a group's revealed preferences. And that's where the discrimination comes in.

mrighele•21m ago
Not op, but if I was paying for ads on a platform, I want to make the best use of my money, and target users that may more likely react positively. If this means that ads looking for mechanics are more likely to be seen by men, so be it, why should I show them to somebody not interested ?

Unless somebody says explicitly "no women", there is no discrimination in my opinion.

a4isms•3m ago
Reminds me of an old argument that if I'm running a restaurant, and if customers don't want to be served by coloured people or homosexuals, I shouldn't have to hire them. It's bad for business, what other reason do I need?

At some point, we have to face the fact that there are two kinds of freedom: The freedom TO something-or-other, and the freedom FROM something-or-other. And the two are often in tension, requiring actual judgment calls and weighing of values, because there is no one perfectly crafted set of objective rules to sort that mess out.

Some people care about the freedom from algorithms not showing them ads for jobs they are qualified to do and pay better, but the companies would prefer the freedom TO primarily hire whomever they please and advertise to whomever they please. Those two freedoms are in tension.

If the freedom from gender discrimination in the marketplace freedom doesn't matter to you, or matters les than the freedom for someone else TO advertise only to men, well, I can see that you are consistent in your beliefs of things I deeply disagree with.

onraglanroad•41m ago
Well I don't really care what you think or agree with and I'm quite happy to see Meta reprimanded.

Since all you offered were your feelings, there isn't anything of substance to follow up on beyond that.

inglor_cz•37m ago
Are the anti-discrimination laws based on anything else than feelings of their proponents with regard to what is wrong and what is right?

If this sort of discrimination was economically ineffective, you would see the market itself slowly adjusting towards a more efficient equilibrium, even without explicit laws.

vlovich123•28m ago
Discrimination is not rooted in economic efficiency so I don’t follow the argument that market forces would correct it.
seneca•21m ago
> Discrimination is not rooted in economic efficiency so I don’t follow the argument that market forces would correct it.

It absolutely is in this case. The whole reason to target ads is to make the people who receive them more likely to engage with them. For instance, including men, elderly people, and children in the target demographic for a preschool teacher job advertisement would make that advertisement significantly less efficient, which is why it's not done.

Forcing companies to disallow targeting of ads because some people are offended by the population's job preferences is absurd.

inglor_cz•17m ago
"Discrimination is not rooted in economic efficiency"

I don't think we know this, it is more of a fervent wish.

standardUser•28m ago
Anti-discrimination laws exist because of the exceptionally well-documented tendency of people in positions of power to judge people based on their gender, sexuality, creed or the color of their skin.
inglor_cz•11m ago
I don't doubt that there are people who operate on a "well, I am a Muslim so I want Muslim employees" scheme or similar ones (woman, black, young), but I do believe that this should be covered by freedom of association.

I do understand that you think otherwise, I have met many people who see things differently.

onraglanroad•26m ago
They're based on the notion that gender discrimination is outdated. It's certainly a particular ideology but I think it's a worthwhile one.

I don't judge things by economic effectiveness; slavery was economically effective at one time but it was still wrong.

inglor_cz•6m ago
"I don't judge things by economic effectiveness;"

Fair enough. I have seen attempts to justify anti-discrimination laws by very shaky economic research too often.

A moral stand is, as you say, independent of the economic ramifications, but as far as "outdated" things go, they may come back to fashion again. Given the current wild political swings between the left and the right, I wouldn't be surprised if at least some Western countries abolished or watered down their anti-discrimination statutes in the next decade or so.

HappyPanacea•37m ago
What is gained from allowing such bias?
rvnx•27m ago
Situation: Men are clicking on job of mechanics, more than women.

Consequence: men are now more likely shown mechanics job.

What is gained: more accurate content, more interesting content, more engagement.

As a result: men are more likely to be shown jobs interesting for men, and women are more likely to be shown jobs interesting for women.

Which means: Increased chances to find a matching job, and to save time doing so.

troupo•20m ago
Nope. What you eventually get is women not getting a variety of jobs they could apply to and a death of men in professions that actually need more men (e.g. nurses, teachers etc.)

We already been through this. It's not ancient history

fastball•16m ago
Yeahhhhhh, those jobs don't have those ratios due to facebook ads.
rvnx•10m ago
Keep in mind that these advertising algorithms are never 100% pushing jobs catered for a specific group, they keep a % of exploration.

https://www.tutorialspoint.com/machine_learning/machine_lear...

This is exploration vs exploitation dilemma. For example let's say that 10% of ads are thrown randomly, and from these random rolls these patterns are discovered:

> [Denver+<40-50> years+men]: mechanics +10%

> [Denver+<40-50> years+men]: nurse -5%

Then the system can apply these coefficients on 90% of the other traffic.

If you are making 100% exploration (so 100% random), then it means the people are going to miss their relevant job opportunity (having a net negative impact on the society).

Increasing exploration is a solution that would legally actually reduce biases of previouses patterns, but at the cost of less relevant content.

In all cases, if the bias is real, exploration discovers them and the coefficients already naturally adjust.

Where Meta / Facebook can play, is to push advertisers to have the broadest targeting as possible (and sure they already do that for business purposes), because it is the advertisers that usually artificially restrict saying "I want only men".

piva00•12m ago
It also means perpetuating the bias, more men will then apply for the job while maybe some women that could get interested didn't get it shown, reinforcing the already existing issue.

Why do we want to perpetuate biases without a chance to allow it to potentially be corrected?

drnick1•25m ago
Ads are built the way they are because they are more effective. This presumably means women would rather be grade school teachers than car mechanics.

Second, some "institute" shouldn't be telling a company or anyone really what it can or can't show on its website. The Internet should remain a free place. If you don't like Facebook, don't use it.

JuniperMesos•23m ago
What's to be gained by making it illegal under French law?
thaumasiotes•19m ago
Advertising will simultaneously become a lot more expensive and less effective. The ability of job seekers to find jobs they're willing to apply to will go down.

Are those not goals of yours?

tbossanova•10m ago
Ads being more expensive and less effective sounds great to me
standardUser•31m ago
> I don't think anyone is meaningfully harmed by being algorithmically shown job ads stereotypical of one gender rather than another

If you show me a lower paying girl job instead of a higher paying boy job, and I apply for and get the girl job, how is the company tricking me into applying for the lower paying job based on my gender not a problem to you? How was I not harmed by having a better opportunity hidden from me based on my presumed gender?

seneca•25m ago
> If you show me a lower paying girl job instead of a higher paying boy job, and I apply for and get the girl job, how is the company tricking me into applying for the lower paying job based on my gender not a problem to you? How as I not harmed by having a better opportunity hidden from me based on my presumed gender?

Not highlighting something to you is not the same as hiding it from you. If you want a job atypical of your demographic, you have the ability to look it up and apply for it. The fact that you might not do that does not justify forcing people to do dramatically less efficient advertising by knowingly including cohorts unlikely to engage with what they're offering.

ivan_gammel•18m ago
The most efficient advertising of jobs is not gender-based, it’s skill-based. Ideally you need to show your ads to candidates with exact match to job description and then some more if the pool is too small. It has nothing to do with gender.
seneca•16m ago
The most efficient advertisement for a job would be to only advertise it to the single candidate who is the best fit for your profile, is looking for a job, and would accept the salary you're offering. Unfortunately intimately detailed profiles like that aren't available, so we target cohorts with the coarse details we do have such as age and gender.
standardUser•16m ago
You seem to be suggesting that companies should be allowed to trick us so long as there is some conceivable amount of work we can do individually to uncover the trick. But because society exists for people and not companies, most of us prefer laws that stop companies from tricking us in the first place.
seneca•15m ago
Advertising or not advertising jobs to people is not "tricking" them. This is a childish argument.
standardUser•11m ago
The Netherlands Institute for Human Rights thinks it makes perfect sense. RTFA
fastball•18m ago
You are not owed either job. Getting a high-paying "boy job" is your own responsibility if you want one.
standardUser•10m ago
Who said anyone was owed a job? The problem is that hiding listings from people based on their gender obviously impacts who gets what jobs.
fastball•3m ago
[delayed]
personomas•25m ago
Totally agree. EU and Europe is going insane with crazy ass laws to punish american companies and regulate everything to death, while they allow their states get away with becoming totalitarian. #unreal
piva00•10m ago
I invite you to stop the screeching speech, it's self-defeating and usually the sign of a mind incapable of nuance.

Learn nuance, it's going to help you in life...

jl6•43m ago
Are these ads in the sense of unsolicited adverts, or is this some kind of job search engine where people are actively asking Facebook to find a job for them?
tremon•35m ago
Why does that distinction matter?
jl6•22m ago
If Facebook have actively hidden job opportunities from someone who is actively searching for employment, that seems like clear and harmful discrimination. If they have just shown targeted ads to someone, possibly mixed into the general adstream, then that seems like a nothingburger.
gogasca•24m ago
Are those algorithms actually doing the right thing? Most of mechanics are men, same for pre-school teachers are women...these are facts not discrimination or bias.
nicole_express•20m ago
I mean, "right" is a social construct. It is likely more effective ad targeting, but European law outlaws this despite that, because they believe it is better social policy, decided through the democratic process.

Like, if it was a bad idea to do, there'd be less reason to outlaw it, right? Since there'd be no incentive for companies like Facebook to do it anyways.

msla•19m ago
Isn't Europe where headshots are a mandatory part of résumés?

I'm sure that Officially Doesn't contribute to discrimination.

lawn•15m ago
Sweden is in Europe and no, it's not mandatory and I've never even seen one with a picture.
skwee357•3m ago
But isn’t the point of ads and all these tech companies with billions of data points, is to optimize ads to the people who are most likely to click them?

I hate ads, and I hate Facebook and all its products, but this just sounds like a bunch of people who misunderstand what ads are for and want equality for the sake of equality.