frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

fp.

Show HN: High-precision mouse polling rate tester

https://mousepollingratetest.com/
1•zylics•2m ago•1 comments

User authorization just got 10x harder

https://leaddev.com/event/user-authorization-just-got-10x-harder
1•mooreds•2m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Infrastructure teams – what's your biggest compliance headache?

1•coppinfra•5m ago•0 comments

Iran official says 2k people have been killed in unrest

https://www.reuters.com/world/china/iranian-mp-warns-greater-unrest-urging-government-address-gri...
1•JumpCrisscross•5m ago•0 comments

Dullness and Disbelief: The 2026 AI Regression

https://vibesbench.substack.com/p/dullness-and-disbelief-the-2026-ai
1•firasd•5m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Fruito – match-3 puzzle game I made with Claude Code

https://fruito.sawirstudio.com/
1•sawirricardo•6m ago•0 comments

The World Has a New Lowest Birth Rate Country: Taiwan at 0.72

https://www.taipeitimes.com/News/front/archives/2026/01/10/2003850357
1•cwwc•7m ago•0 comments

Is Elon Musk the Worst in Tech?

https://aiweekly.co/issues/459
1•treadump•9m ago•1 comments

DoorDash and Pizza Arbitrage (2020)

https://www.readmargins.com/p/doordash-and-pizza-arbitrage
1•timvdalen•9m ago•0 comments

Docker just made their hardened images free and open source

https://twitter.com/BetterStackHQ/status/2011011753136517126
1•landsman•9m ago•0 comments

Thirteen Months That Changed IBM

https://newsroom.ibm.com/Thirteen-Months-That-Changed-IBM
2•vednig•10m ago•0 comments

Using the Physics of Radio Waves to Empower Smarter Edge Devices

https://pratt.duke.edu/news/using-the-physics-of-radio-waves-to-empower-smarter-edge-devices/
1•wjSgoWPm5bWAhXB•12m ago•0 comments

Facebook login thieves now using browser-in-browser trick

https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/facebook-login-thieves-now-using-browser-in-browse...
1•7777777phil•12m ago•0 comments

Why Is Everyone Suddenly Talking About Putting Data Centers in Space?

https://theintercept.com/2026/01/12/data-centers-space-ai/
1•Qem•13m ago•0 comments

The value of random zero-sum games

https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.07759
2•7777777phil•13m ago•0 comments

How General Counsel Can Operationalise AIVO Inside Legal Workflows

https://www.aivojournal.org/how-general-counsel-can-operationalise-aivo-inside-legal-workflows/
1•businessmate•13m ago•1 comments

What's the deepest modern book on forecasting? (I wrote one)

https://valeman.gumroad.com/l/MasteringModernTimeSeriesForecasting
1•predict_addict•14m ago•1 comments

Self-hosting Git and builds without running a bunch of web services

https://duggan.ie/posts/self-hosting-git-and-builds-without-running-a-bunch-of-web-services
1•duggan•16m ago•0 comments

Rustlings is now available on Rustfinity

https://www.rustfinity.com/rustlings
1•dcodes•18m ago•0 comments

Junior devs don't know the red flags we spot in seconds and we never tell them

https://yourlead.dev
8•err0r500•20m ago•5 comments

Apple's Patent Grants Declined in 2025 as Innovation Slows

https://www.macrumors.com/2026/01/13/apple-patents-declined-in-2025/
3•7777777phil•21m ago•0 comments

Lessons from Search

https://altertable.ai/blog/2026-01-13-lessons-from-search
2•altertable•24m ago•0 comments

Network of Scottish X accounts go dark amid Iran blackout

https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/25759181.network-scottish-x-accounts-go-dark-amid-iran-blackout/
4•TiredOfLife•25m ago•0 comments

My Week with OpenCode

https://deadsimpletech.com/blog/week_with_opencode
3•kioku•26m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Theus – I built a framework to make AI-generated code safe to run

https://github.com/dohuyhoang93/theus
1•dohuyhoangvn93•26m ago•0 comments

How dangerous are high-cardinality labels in Prometheus?

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/46373442/how-dangerous-are-high-cardinality-labels-in-prometheus
1•tosh•27m ago•0 comments

Sandboxing Your LLM CLI Agent – Best Solutions Gathered by HN

1•mentalgear•28m ago•1 comments

At This Office Park, Scamming the World Was the Business

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/13/world/asia/myanmar-scam-center.html
2•reaperducer•30m ago•0 comments

Everything is a Programming Problem

https://www.ggpush.dev/p/everything-is-a-programming-problem
1•ashfakh_•35m ago•0 comments

Sandbox your LLM agent – Vibekit

https://docs.vibekit.sh/sdk
1•mentalgear•37m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

UK Expands Online Safety Act to Mandate Preemptive Scanning

https://reclaimthenet.org/uk-expands-online-safety-act-to-mandate-preemptive-scanning
41•aftergibson•1h ago

Comments

ajsnigrutin•55m ago
How will it know if the dick pic is wanted or unwanted?
netsharc•51m ago
The recipient will be required to fill a form to confirm desire for the dick pic, and the ministry will issue a dispensation allowing the taking and sending of said dick pic.

Please allow 3-4 weeks to process the request.

bubblethink•41m ago
Yes, it's an amended version of form 27B/6.
kitd•40m ago
Can I get that one in the Post Office?
HeckFeck•37m ago
No, but you can get the form to request the form. Then it must be stamped by an official in the [strikethrough]Ministry of Information[/strikethrough] Ofcom. Please allow 4-5 months for processing thanks to our partners delivering efficient intersection of Government and Industry, Capita.
mikkupikku•28m ago
Those forms are kept in the Displays Department, in the basement.
hexbin010•41m ago
The uncomfortable truth: I know and have met plenty of women who have invited and welcomed dick pics. As a gay guy, I can tell you that lots of women are actually very interested in dick pics. They don't need a minister protecting them from themselves.
PunchyHamster•51m ago
UK has fallen
Mistletoe•43m ago
Pre-cog, you say?
pelagicAustral•35m ago
Minority Report for dickpics
hexbin010•43m ago
Wow nobody saw this coming /s

They whipped up a mini pandemic of people being subject to an onslaught of unwanted dick pics (not mentioning even once about the "block" feature on every single platform) to justify it

This is the Ministry of Truth building up their toolset

ghusto•39m ago
> The UK Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) unveiled the changes through a promotional video showing a smartphone scanning AirDropped photos and warning the user that an “unwanted nude” had been detected.

"Unwanted"

soco•36m ago
I can imagine in the app/phone settings "allow nudes only from contacts" or a whitelist something? I get on Tumblr all the time unsolicited shit, not necessarily bad looking but no thanks I can take care of myself.
rdm_blackhole•28m ago
> The UK Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT)

It should be called the Ministry of Truth at this point.

> Unwanted

How do you know if a nude is unwanted? The premise itself makes no sense. The only way this could potentially work is if you had the whole context of the relationship somehow embedded in the messages and then if you deciphered the intent behind the messages. Even then what about sarcasm or double entendre?

potato3732842•25m ago
>How do you know if a nude is unwanted? The premise itself makes no sense

If the app has sufficient permissions to infer user demographics a sufficiently jaded person should be able to come up with a set of rules that get you a 99% solution pretty easily.

mikkupikku•20m ago
In the future, phones will refuse to take pictures of dicks unless men register their height and income levels so that useful and relevant information can be added to the image metadata.
flumpcakes•22m ago
Perhaps there should be a setting "Allow X" that has to be set on a contact. By default it is set to disallow nudes.

I think this already exists by the way - screening potentially pornographic images and you have to explicitly confirm a choice to view it.

akikoo•14m ago
"Allow X" now that they are planning to ban X :)
mosura•18m ago
Cryptographically signed with proof of the sender’s bank balance to enable appropriate filtering.
doublerabbit•37m ago
How's that lawsuit with 4Chan going ofcom? Last checking, just now the site is still online.

Time to move my colocated servers out of the UK.

HeckFeck•36m ago
If they're really keen, they could just ask the hacker known as Soyjak.party to knock it offline again.
westmeal•23m ago
They'd better make sure there are no conspicuously placed yellow vans a either, least they explode.
pelagicAustral•36m ago
It will get sorted in two more weeks
HeckFeck•34m ago
Nothing any government in my lifetime has done has arrested this feeling of decay, decline and desperation. It's like the occupational political class has a miserable vendetta and must afflict it upon the population. But I'm not actually miserable like you, I don't want to feel like you, we invented liberty in this country, now fuck off the lot of you thank you.
captain_coffee•28m ago
So wait - would this be something like... you trying to send a dickpic via WhateverMessenger, the content would be scanned first and you would be presented with a message along the lines of "This message cannot be sent as it violates our T&Cs"?
imdsm•21m ago
scanned locally or externally? that's what i care about
Phemist•15m ago
Don't buy into the framing. No scanning at all is what I care about.
ChrisRR•15m ago
Preferably not scanned at all
like_any_other•14m ago
More likely it would just silently not be sent, and potentially a week later you get a visit from the cops. Censors hate drawing attention to their actions, that is why you never see a "this message censored on government request" as sender or recipient.

This is where someone conflates it with anti-spam and acts confused, because showing such a notice for every spam message would make a service unusable. As if spam is equivalent, as if users cannot be given the choice to opt in/out of however much anti-spam and other filtering that they want as recipients, and as if "This was censored" messages cannot be collapsed/shown per category, e.g. "Messages blocked: 12 spam, 4 unwanted sexual content, 5 misinformation/lacking context, 7 hate/harmful content". As a rule, when someone raises an objection that can be resolved with less than 60 seconds of thought, they are not being genuine.

But more importantly, it would make it illegal to provide any kind of messaging software without government approval, which is only given by letting government-designated censorship and surveillance services act as middle-men. And then the law can be more or less strictly applied, depending how much the government dislikes the general sentiment that is spread on your network, regardless of its legality, thus controlling discourse.

I am not speculating here - this is what the UK government has admitted they want:

First, we are told, the relevant secretary of state (Michelle Donelan) expressed “concern” that the legislation might whack sites such as Amazon instead of Pornhub. In response, officials explained that the regulation in question was “not primarily aimed at … the protection of children”, but was about regulating “services that have a significant influence over public discourse”, a phrase that rather gives away the political thinking behind the act. - https://archive.md/2025.08.13-190800/https://www.thetimes.co...

Popeyes•28m ago
Tech industry walked right into this one, well done Musk.
mikkupikku•23m ago
UK government publicly making a fool of itself is probably not counter to the interests of Elon Musk at all... His political faction have been keen to insult the British government whenever possible. The more absurd their public enemies act, the more reasonable they look in comparison.
flumpcakes•20m ago
Musk is implicitly allowing child pornography on his platform. There's no way around that. Apple/Google should have removed X a while ago.
mikkupikku•19m ago
Come on now. That's obviously not true. CSAM is absolutely banned on twitter, and all other American platforms.
cjs_ac•9m ago
Grok AI generating child pornography has been a leading news story in the British press for the past few days.
jpfromlondon•2m ago
to make the censorship more palatable to the general public.
flumpcakes•3m ago
Then why does Musk refuse to fix 'Grok' and allow it to produce CSAM? Is this what the billionaire class want? AI everywhere and then hide behind "it's not the AI doing it, it's the users prompting it!".
miroljub•23m ago
Sex Pistols are more actual than ever.

    God save the Queen
    The fascist regime
    It made you a moron
    Potential H-bomb
    God save the Queen
    She ain't no human being
    There is no future
    In England's dreaming

    Don't be told what you want to want to
    And don't be told what you want to need
    There's no future, no future
    No future for you
mosura•13m ago
They were also about the only people to call out Savile while he was alive.

Actual abusers are fine. Talking about it is the problem.

10xDev•21m ago
In the past 5 years, the entire demographic of my street has completely changed. I have no idea what these people do for work or how they came in but the houses on this road are not at all cheap. But sure, while the whole country gets flipped on its head at least we are getting "safety" on our screens. Thanks.
amelius•21m ago
Which city?
_fzslm•18m ago
And which people?
ChrisRR•15m ago
Oh this is a very loaded statement if I've ever seen one. What's your issue with the "demographic of your street"?
imdsm•19m ago
> To meet the law’s demands, companies are expected to rely heavily on automated scanning systems, content detection algorithms, and artificial intelligence models trained to evaluate the legality of text, images, and videos in real time.

this means either devices need to evolve to do this locally, or the items need to be sent to external service providers, usually based outside of the UK, to scan them unencrypted

I also assume this means the government here in the UK are okay with all whatsapp messages they send to be sent to an LLM to scan them for legality, outside the UK?

6LLvveMx2koXfwn•13m ago
I understand the rage generated here, but what is the alternative?

If a service implements privacy invading 'features' then we have the choice not to use that service. Letting tech companies self-regulate has failed, and too many people leave morality at the door when engaging online, something which doesn't happen at scale IRL.

What are we to do if not monitor? And how to make that scalable if not to introduce automation?

flumpcakes•9m ago
> Letting tech companies self-regulate has failed, and too many people leave morality at the door when engaging online, something which doesn't happen at scale IRL.

I completely agree with this point.

We also have some tech companies (X) openly hostile to the UK Government. At what point does a sovereign country say "you're harming the people here and refuse to change, you're blocked".

cft•9m ago
Goodbye all small independent forums with no AI budgets. An attacker posts a nude picture, 18m fine from OfCom ("whichever is larger", not proportional to revenue)
enderforth•5m ago
I don't know what the alternative is, but I don't think I've ever found a situation yet where the solution has been His Majesty's Government being able to exercise more control over what people can see and hear.
jpfromlondon•5m ago
>too many people leave morality at the door

Yep, that's life, if something bothers you and it's already a crime then report it.

There is precious little in life that can be undertaken without some risk of something unwanted however small (hah).

flumpcakes•13m ago
Most of these comments I think are off the mark. For some reason anything to do with EU or the UK legislating to protect citizenry is seen as some Orwellian conspiracy to mind control people. I agree some of the policies feel like using always using a hammer - but I strongly suspect it's because the tech industry is clearly not playing ball.

Children being sent dick pics, or AI generated nudes of them being sent around schools, etc. are real problems facing real normal people.

I think people here need to be reminded that the average person doesn't care about technology. They will be happy for their phones to automatically block nude pictures by Government rule if the tech companies do not improve their social safety measures. This is the double edged sword: these same people are not tech savvy enough to lock down their children's phones, they expect it to be safe, they paid money for it to be "safe", and even if you lock a phone down, it doesn't stopped their class mates sending them AI porn of other class mates.

Musk is living proof that a non zero number of these giant tech companies are happy for child porn ("fake" or not) to be posted on their platform. If I was in his shoes, it would be pretty high up on my list to make sure Grok isn't posting pornography. It's not hard to be a good person.

HPsquared•6m ago
The things you mention are already illegal. The effective proven solution is to enforce existing laws, to punish and deter bad behaviour like any other crime.

This incongruence is why a lot of people don't take the reasoning at face value and see it as only rhetorical justification for increased surveillance, which is widely understood as something the state wants do do anyway.

enderforth•7m ago
Okay, everyone here is talking about dick pics but let's be clear hear the goal is

>A major expansion of the UK’s Online Safety Act (OSA) has taken effect, legally obliging digital platforms to deploy surveillance-style systems that scan, detect, and block user content before it can be seen.

Do we really believe that no government forever is not going to use this to prevent certain "misinformation" from circulating?

And by misinformation we mean things like MPs breaking COVID lock down rules or "problematic" information about the PM being involved in a scandal, or the list is endless.

Let's be clear this isn't at all and never has been about dick pics this is 100% about being able to control what you can see and share.