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USS Preble Used Helios Laser to Zap Four Drones in Expanding Testing

https://www.twz.com/sea/uss-preble-used-helios-laser-to-zap-four-drones-in-expanding-testing
1•breve•3m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Animated beach scene, made with CSS

https://ahmed-machine.github.io/beach-scene/
1•ahmedoo•4m ago•0 comments

An update on unredacting select Epstein files – DBC12.pdf liberated

https://neosmart.net/blog/efta00400459-has-been-cracked-dbc12-pdf-liberated/
1•ks2048•4m ago•0 comments

Was going to share my work

1•hiddenarchitect•8m ago•0 comments

Pitchfork: A devilishly good process manager for developers

https://pitchfork.jdx.dev/
1•ahamez•8m ago•0 comments

You Are Here

https://brooker.co.za/blog/2026/02/07/you-are-here.html
3•mltvc•12m ago•0 comments

Why social apps need to become proactive, not reactive

https://www.heyflare.app/blog/from-reactive-to-proactive-how-ai-agents-will-reshape-social-apps
1•JoanMDuarte•13m ago•1 comments

How patient are AI scrapers, anyway? – Random Thoughts

https://lars.ingebrigtsen.no/2026/02/07/how-patient-are-ai-scrapers-anyway/
1•samtrack2019•13m ago•0 comments

Vouch: A contributor trust management system

https://github.com/mitchellh/vouch
1•SchwKatze•13m ago•0 comments

I built a terminal monitoring app and custom firmware for a clock with Claude

https://duggan.ie/posts/i-built-a-terminal-monitoring-app-and-custom-firmware-for-a-desktop-clock...
1•duggan•14m ago•0 comments

Tiny C Compiler

https://bellard.org/tcc/
1•guerrilla•16m ago•0 comments

Y Combinator Founder Organizes 'March for Billionaires'

https://mlq.ai/news/ai-startup-founder-organizes-march-for-billionaires-protest-against-californi...
1•hidden80•16m ago•1 comments

Ask HN: Need feedback on the idea I'm working on

1•Yogender78•17m ago•0 comments

OpenClaw Addresses Security Risks

https://thebiggish.com/news/openclaw-s-security-flaws-expose-enterprise-risk-22-of-deployments-un...
1•vedantnair•17m ago•0 comments

Apple finalizes Gemini / Siri deal

https://www.engadget.com/ai/apple-reportedly-plans-to-reveal-its-gemini-powered-siri-in-february-...
1•vedantnair•18m ago•0 comments

Italy Railways Sabotaged

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/czr4rx04xjpo
3•vedantnair•18m ago•0 comments

Emacs-tramp-RPC: high-performance TRAMP back end using MsgPack-RPC

https://github.com/ArthurHeymans/emacs-tramp-rpc
1•fanf2•19m ago•0 comments

Nintendo Wii Themed Portfolio

https://akiraux.vercel.app/
1•s4074433•24m ago•1 comments

"There must be something like the opposite of suicide "

https://post.substack.com/p/there-must-be-something-like-the
1•rbanffy•26m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Why doesn't Netflix add a “Theater Mode” that recreates the worst parts?

2•amichail•27m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Engineering Perception with Combinatorial Memetics

1•alan_sass•33m ago•2 comments

Show HN: Steam Daily – A Wordle-like daily puzzle game for Steam fans

https://steamdaily.xyz
1•itshellboy•35m ago•0 comments

The Anthropic Hive Mind

https://steve-yegge.medium.com/the-anthropic-hive-mind-d01f768f3d7b
1•spenvo•35m ago•0 comments

Just Started Using AmpCode

https://intelligenttools.co/blog/ampcode-multi-agent-production
1•BojanTomic•36m ago•0 comments

LLM as an Engineer vs. a Founder?

1•dm03514•37m ago•0 comments

Crosstalk inside cells helps pathogens evade drugs, study finds

https://phys.org/news/2026-01-crosstalk-cells-pathogens-evade-drugs.html
2•PaulHoule•38m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Design system generator (mood to CSS in <1 second)

https://huesly.app
1•egeuysall•38m ago•1 comments

Show HN: 26/02/26 – 5 songs in a day

https://playingwith.variousbits.net/saturday
1•dmje•39m ago•0 comments

Toroidal Logit Bias – Reduce LLM hallucinations 40% with no fine-tuning

https://github.com/Paraxiom/topological-coherence
1•slye514•41m ago•1 comments

Top AI models fail at >96% of tasks

https://www.zdnet.com/article/ai-failed-test-on-remote-freelance-jobs/
5•codexon•41m ago•2 comments
Open in hackernews

Google steers Americans looking for health care into "junk insurance"

https://pluralistic.net/2025/11/25/open-season/
144•hn_acker•2mo ago

Comments

hedora•2mo ago
PSA for folks in Northern California:

The Sutter Health Network / Palo Alto Medical Foundation routinely get caught committing widespread insurance fraud.

They also offer products that seem to be junk insurance to me, but I’m not a lawyer.

Here are three examples of their alleged widespread insurance fraud:

https://allaboutlawyer.com/claim-your-sutter-health-settleme...

https://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/sutter-health-accused...

https://www.justice.gov/archives/opa/pr/government-intervene...

Some of those suites involve other big providers, like KP. Not sure if any of the healthcare providers around here are reputable at this point.

BLKNSLVR•2mo ago
So Luigi Mangione had no effect, or it's too early to tell?
bigfishrunning•2mo ago
He never had any chance of having any effect, except maybe for an increased bodyguard budget. A single murderer rarely triggers societal change.
potato3732842•2mo ago
>A single murderer rarely triggers societal change.

I was gonna bring up Franz but you said "rarely" not "never".

I think people are wising up to the fact that at scale modern forms of insurance, all forms not just health, is not a real product that delivers value to both parties, it's a contrived way to use government force to lighten everyone's pockets to the benefit of a few while paying out only as needed to justify the pretext and the only thing it really shares with it's free-ish market equivalents from 50+yr ago is the name. So there will probably be more murders before things change.

dboreham•2mo ago
Great powers were already on the brink by the time the archduke thing happened. It would have been some other trigger.
potato3732842•2mo ago
If Franz isn't good enough we can do Caesar.

You can call things inevitable and on some level they likely are but +/-5yr makes a huge difference in the exact turns of events and the form that history takes because at the very least it determines who the parties involved are and/or affects the circumstances they are balancing. Do we still get Hitler if WW1 starts later or goes slightly differently? You don't get the modern world without Hitler.

Us typing this here and now with the world as it is is necessarily predicated on a ton of things who's details came down in large part to chance. And it goes back way, way, way further than that.

tourmalinetaco•2mo ago
If Ted K. had no effect what hope did Mangione have?
cebert•2mo ago
Well, the woman Ted threw into Poucha Pond didn’t have any ties to health care.
LorenPechtel•2mo ago
Note that most of his complaint is with experimental stuff. Why should insurance be required to cover experimental stuff? It's basically chasing the illusion of a solution.
darth_avocado•2mo ago
Just use Kaiser if you’re down bad. It’s cheaper than the absolute cheapest scam insurances and will get you a decent level of care.
jpollock•2mo ago
Kaiser (Nor Cal), has been amazing. I highly recommend them. I hear lots of complaints from friends who have other providers, but Kaiser "just works".

We've been through cancer and diabetes (so far).

nothercastle•2mo ago
You actually get great level of care they suck at advertising though and most people think they are bottom tier when they are not
pengaru•2mo ago
Until you find yourself desperate for a malpractice suit, and Surprise! your insurer and care provider are on the same team and you already agreed to arbitration when you got that insurance.

A friend had his life wrecked by Kaiser, and none of the attorneys he consulted wanted to touch the case because according to the attorneys they had an army of lawyers and he'd already agreed to arbitration when getting the insurance. The max they claimed could be won wouldn't even cover the legal fees.

You definitely don't want insurance from the same team you're getting the insured services from. It's the conflict of interests to end all conflict of interests, especially in the context of health care.

triceratops•2mo ago
From what you tell us, binding arbitration sounds like the actual problem. Not the insurer and provider being the same company.

To me the latter is an alignment of interests. The insurer will happily pay for preventive screenings and care to save itself costs on treatment later.

autoexec•2mo ago
> From what you tell us, binding arbitration sounds like the actual problem. Not the insurer and provider being the same company.

No, the actual problem is that the insurer and provider want to screw over the paying customer. Binding arbitration is just one convenient method they've taken advantage of to accomplish that. Getting rid of binding arbitration is still a good idea, but you can bet they'll find some other way to screw over their customers because they clearly care more about profit than people. The actual solution would be to reform the healthcare system so that its goal is focused more on healing people than stuffing pockets with cash and so companies that only care about money are forced out of it entirely.

Since it's unlikely that anyone with the power to fix the deeply broken healthcare system will do it any time soon, the least people can do is avoid this insurer and healthcare provider since they've demonstrated themselves to be hostile to their own paying customers.

triceratops•2mo ago
Kaiser's structure is complicated. Its health plan arm, which offers insurance, is non-profit. So is its hospital foundation, which owns and operates hospitals. Its medical offices are for-profit and owned by doctors.

I don't see a big profit motive for Kaiser because it's a non-profit. And because the same company owns the insurance provider and hospitals, they're incentivized to keep overall costs down. As long as they can't arbitrarily throw people off their plans, this means investing in preventive care and doing it cheap.

Traditional insurance providers don't care about that. They actually like it when hospitals raise prices because it allows them to charge higher premiums. Since they can only take up to 10% in premiums (or some other number, but it's a fixed %) as profits, higher costs and higher premiums are good for their bottom line.

Kaiser is how single-payer healthcare would look if it wasn't run by the government.

> reform the healthcare system so that its goal is focused more on healing people than stuffing pockets with cash and so companies that only care about money are forced out of it entirely.

What does that actually mean? What concrete steps would you take to accomplish this? Without specifics this is wooly, idealistic nonsense.

Again to take Kaiser's example: their doctors are salaried (at least the ones that work in hospitals). They have no incentive to overbill you or make you take unnecessary tests. The doctors make the same money no matter what procedures they do on you. And Kaiser owns the insurance company that's paying those bills. They also have no incentive to skip necessary tests. If they miss a problem it'll cost Kaiser more money later to treat you. Do you have a better way to "focus [only] on healing people" than that?

smilebot•2mo ago
I found the opposite to be true. Kaiser is worth the premium. Doctors and care has been amazing.
xtiansimon•2mo ago
Oh? “amazing” is the _opposite_ of “decent”?
pluralmonad•2mo ago
Maybe worth the premium was the part opposite cheap as scam insurance?
xtiansimon•2mo ago
No one who lives (has lived) in California thinks Kaiser is a scam. You may not like Kaiser or HMOs, but they are not a scam by any measure. So its an odd or simply mistaken choice of words.

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

smilebot•2mo ago
Choose Kaiser if your only other option is a cheap scan VS seek out Kaiser even if it has a premium.

Seem to be opposite enough.

Maybe if we tried to see the underlying point instead, would make it easier to move the discussion forward.

aidenn0•2mo ago
Sutter recently bought the company that my kids' pediatrician works for. The changes so far have been sufficiently negative that I have to decide if I want to go through the pain of finding a new pediatrician or just stick it out for the next few years until my youngest switches to a GP.
lumost•2mo ago
Ooc what issues do you encounter?
nickff•2mo ago
This Pluralistic post seems very rant-y, but it links to a Bloomberg piece that seems like a better source for backing up the claim: https://www.bloomberg.com/features/2025-obamacare-open-enrol...

As someone with a little experience with the 'advertiser side' of Google, they also push junk to their paying clients, using every opportunity to sell terrible, worthless placements to advertisers. Which is to say that the problem is not that 'searchers' are the product, the problem is that Google is not focused on creating value for its counter-parties.

rubyfan•2mo ago
Why should it? If you aren’t satisfied you can take your business elsewhere… wait never mind, there is no alternative.
nickff•2mo ago
I agree that Google is benefiting from being the dominant player in a two-sided marketplace (which makes it harder to compete), but we can always choose not to use it, both as advertisers and as searchers. Google’s exploitation of its counter-parties has definitely caused me to use alternatives more and more often.
tourmalinetaco•2mo ago
Google is my third choice for searches. I try Ecosia first, but their indexing is garbage so I typically then go to Brave. If Brave doesn’t have it then I submit to the evil overlords at Google. Thankfully Brave indexing is pretty good so it‘s had a measurable impact on the amount of search I actually put through Google.
rubyfan•2mo ago
I use DDG on the consumer side but you, I and most people on HN are outliers, the other 90% don’t care enough to use something else yet.
Workaccount2•2mo ago
Kagi is the correct answer, because you pay for the service you use.
herbst•2mo ago
It's incredible hard to build a ad business around fairness. In 99% of all cases it's going to be a highest bidder thing.
Ferret7446•2mo ago
Is that not fair?
herbst•2mo ago
For the advertiser, not the customer. There is never and incident to show the best product instead of the best paying one.

This discrepancy is always there for everything we see and get advertised for.

bitmasher9•2mo ago
That’s strictly not true, at least for “old media” advertising.

Advertisers are selected based on being palatable for the content and the audience. It’s common for content licensing deals to has stipulations about which advertisement is acceptable. Virtually all platforms — even Google Search — has rules about the type of advertisements you see. There are of course laws that prohibit the advertising of certain types of products in certain places.

Even if these scams had the money for a full page NYT article, they wouldn’t had gotten it.

morkalork•2mo ago
I hate to be that guy but is it Google's responsibility to police legally operating insurance companies? It's not their problem that USA has a trash insurance market and a backwards healthcare system.
ggm•2mo ago
I believe traditional publishers had pretty specific liability for the stuff they carry. There's no magic exclusion for ads that I know of.
gruez•2mo ago
Source? Specifically, examples where publishers were sued for fraudulent products they advertised?
ggm•2mo ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beardstown_Ladies is the exemplar
toast0•2mo ago
That's a book publisher being liable for the book it published.

We're looking for a newspaper publisher being liable for the ad it published. Not a story it published.

tourmalinetaco•2mo ago
Legally? No. However, due to their alteration of search results anything that becomes the top is effectively an endorsement regardless of whether it was chosen by the black box or their employees. They already remove legally operating websites they disagree with. Since they’re selective editors with multiple lost antitrust suits, the only thing we as consumers can do is criticize. Especially as most of these companies top the charts due to SEO spam and not genuine traffic.
venturecruelty•2mo ago
Poor, powerless Google. The scrappy, ragtag outfit down in Mountain View, barely hanging on, unable to downrank predatory insurance companies. I'll say an extra prayer for them during Compline tonight.
morkalork•2mo ago
Didn't say they were powerless but you do you
notfed•2mo ago
Imagine how hard moderating a forum is. Now imagine moderating the whole Internet. Everyone always thinks it's trivial. Everyone couldn't be more wrong.
venturecruelty•2mo ago
How convenient that Google gets to reap all of the benefits of that situation without bearing any of the responsibility. Oh, but it's fine, because they have a trillion dollars and "it's hard, you guuyyysss!"
morkalork•2mo ago
"lets make private corporations responsible for policing the behavior of other corporations instead of the government and legislation" <- this is what I'm hearing
davkan•2mo ago
Yes, we should not have built internet scale services and forums if it was not possible to moderate them effectively.
chasing0entropy•2mo ago
Imagine a magazine that only had garbage ads for scam insurance, adware, and cheap Chinese $2 trinkets, would you keep your subscription?

You can't cancel google. They make sure of it

PeakKS•2mo ago
To be fair, it's all "junk insurance"
Brendinooo•2mo ago
> Amazingly enough, these aren't even the worst kinds of garbage health plans that you can buy in America: those would be the religious "health share" programs that sleazy evangelical "entrepreneurs" suck their co-religionists into, which cost the world and leave you high and dry when you or your kids get hurt or sick:

Seems worth noting that "sleazy" and "suck their co-religionists into" are (unfounded, as far as I can tell) opinions, "cost the world" is flat-out false and the exact reason why they are an appealing option, and "and leave you high and dry when you or your kids get hurt or sick" is also an unfounded claim. His only citation for any of this is talking about someone who doesn't like morality clauses, but...picked it anyways, presumably because it didn't cost the world?

Some are better than others. I picked the one that looked the most like real insurance and has a >30 year track record of not leaving people high and dry. I've been on it for almost seven years and it's worked out well so far.

LorenPechtel•2mo ago
They (religious health share stuff) all have an inherent, fundamental flaw in that there is no actual insurance obligation. It's like the old days, get sick enough and you get dropped. But without even an illusion of being able to keep it. I'm not going to blame the author for failing to prove something long established.
Brendinooo•2mo ago
"get sick enough and you get dropped" is a very, very different statement than "leave you high and dry when you or your kids get hurt or sick".

And if it's "like the old days", then it must not be some some uniquely sleazy thing.

I'll also add:

>these plans do not comply with the Affordable Care Act, which requires comprehensive coverage, and bans exclusions for pre-existing conditions. These plans only exist because of loopholes in the ACA, designed for very small-scale employers or temporary coverage...

He lumps sharing ministries in with this, but it's worth noting that the company I'm with was explicitly exempted by the ACA from the outset. It's not a loophole. Health sharing ministries that existed before the year 2000 could be used to satisfy the individual mandate. So he's being misleading here as well.

LorenPechtel•2mo ago
He's lumping them in because they have the same problem, not because they're actually the same thing.
Brendinooo•2mo ago
It doesn't seem like he put in a good effort to accurately portray the thing he's criticizing.
ruralfam•2mo ago
"It's omnienshittified, a partnership between the enshittified search giant and the shittiest parts of the totally enshittified health industry."

Omnienshittified: May go down as the most hilarious - yet prescient - new word this century. (In the USA of course.)

LorenPechtel•2mo ago
I don't really see that Google is causing this, just showing what's out there. Search inherently selects for advertising because companies craft their sites to look good for on the search terms.

The problem is that these things exist at all.

venturecruelty•2mo ago
It's a shame that Google is powerless to downrank websites for companies committing fraud. I wish we could help them.
more_corn•2mo ago
This is sarcasm right? It’s often difficult to tell sarcasm from honest idiocy.