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Show HN: Workspace-updater can now hoist common deps

1•smashah•2m ago•0 comments

ShinyHunters claims Okta customer breaches, leaks data belonging to 3 orgs

https://www.theregister.com/2026/01/23/shinyhunters_claims_okta_customer_breaches/
1•mooreds•3m ago•0 comments

Emulator2000 – Seiko Digital Watch Emulator

https://github.com/azya52/Emulator2000
1•rickcarlino•3m ago•0 comments

A plugin for Claude that forces you to write code

https://github.com/mlolson/claude-spp
1•LordHumungous•6m ago•1 comments

How Does the Hedgehog Engine 2 Work? [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RLJQRccTwMs
1•todsacerdoti•6m ago•0 comments

Human Meaning Emerged From Exaptation: A software update, not a hardware upgrade [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=54l8_ewcOlY
2•clarencehoward•8m ago•1 comments

Stackmaxxing for a recursion world record [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WQKSyPYF0-Y
2•edward28•9m ago•0 comments

GNU C Library 2.43 released with more C23 features, mseal and openat2 functions

https://www.phoronix.com/news/GNU-C-Library-Glibc-2.43
2•birdculture•9m ago•0 comments

Cow Clicker

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cow_Clicker
1•Ariarule•10m ago•0 comments

Wine-Staging 11.1 Adds Patches for Enabling Recent Adobe Photoshop Versions

https://www.phoronix.com/news/Wine-Staging-11.1
1•doener•10m ago•0 comments

The Longevity FAQ

https://nintil.com/longevity/
1•aabiji•11m ago•0 comments

Curl Gets Rid of Its Bug Bounty Program over AI Slop Overrun

https://itsfoss.com/news/curl-closes-bug-bounty-program/
1•nreece•16m ago•1 comments

The iOS 26 Adoption Rate Is Not Bizarrely Low Compared to Previous Years

https://daringfireball.net/2026/01/ios_26_adoption_rate_is_not_bizarrely_low
2•chmaynard•24m ago•0 comments

The Secretive VIP Programs That Keep Gamers Spending

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/20/arts/zynga-vip-video-games.html
4•bookofjoe•27m ago•1 comments

O Fortuna

https://robcruser.substack.com/p/o-fortuna
1•joebig•29m ago•0 comments

StoryGleam – Use Storybook with Gleam Projects

https://codeberg.org/theSuess/storygleam
1•TheWiggles•29m ago•1 comments

Tesla unsupervised Robotaxis are nowhere to be found

https://lightbrd.com/ZacksJerryRig/status/2015119993428705575#m
2•TheAlchemist•36m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Reel Rogue – A browser roguelike (idler) about manipulating the odds

https://www.alt-qq.com/
1•qq-niklas•37m ago•0 comments

Show HN: AI agent that searches the Cursor forum

https://cursor.trynia.ai/
2•jellyotsiro•38m ago•0 comments

Nvidia: Dynamic Memory Compression

https://developer.nvidia.com/blog/dynamic-memory-compression/
2•alecco•42m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Skget, another CLI to add skills to your coding agents

https://github.com/czheo/skget
1•czheo•42m ago•0 comments

Code as Content

https://www.contraption.co/code-as-content-and-digital-proprioception/
1•philip1209•43m ago•0 comments

CIO: Work-from-office mandate? Expect top talent turnover, culture rot

https://www.cio.com/article/4119562/work-from-office-mandate-expect-top-talent-turnover-culture-r...
6•dmitrygr•43m ago•0 comments

Failure to press button caused outage on train lines in Tokyo

https://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/16307027
2•resonious•52m ago•0 comments

EU groupthink manifests itself as polite silence

https://www.ft.com/content/ecf765d1-6110-420d-abcf-9255ec015b19
1•hhs•53m ago•0 comments

Show HN: C From Scratch – Learn safety-critical C with prove-first methodology

https://github.com/SpeyTech/c-from-scratch
4•william1872•53m ago•0 comments

Hiltzik: Yes, California should tax billionaires' wealth. Here's why

https://www.latimes.com/business/story/2026-01-08/yes-california-should-tax-billionaires-wealth-h...
4•PaulHoule•54m ago•1 comments

Backseat Software

https://blog.mikeswanson.com/backseat-software/
1•ruuda•54m ago•0 comments

Adoption of EVs tied to real-world reductions in air pollution: study

https://keck.usc.edu/news/adoption-of-electric-vehicles-tied-to-real-world-reductions-in-air-poll...
3•hhs•55m ago•0 comments

We are building a new browser from scratch, backed by a non-profit

https://ladybird.org/
6•nailer•1h ago•2 comments
Open in hackernews

Europe wants to end its dangerous reliance on US internet technology

https://theconversation.com/europe-wants-to-end-its-dangerous-reliance-on-us-internet-technology-274042
111•DyslexicAtheist•1h ago

Comments

testing22321•1h ago
At this point they’d be insane not to.

Headline could be “every country wants to end all reliance on US” and it would be the sane thing to do.

analog31•1h ago
Including the US. I don't want to be dependent on this stuff any more than anybody else does.
lateforwork•1h ago
Exactly. I live in the US but I'd like to switch from US apps and services controlled by US oligarchs such as Elon Musk and Zuckerberg to European alternatives.
testing22321•45m ago
Then you should do that.

I just moved all my hosting and domains out of the US after 15 years of good service.

johanneskanybal•56m ago
This is the point of time in history where the people usually start a revolution. Do that.
SpicyLemonZest•39m ago
This is one of the things where the nature of the modern United States makes it hard. I routinely go around telling people that the current regime in Washington is illegitimate, nobody should obey them or listen to their lies, and that I look forward to the day they're ripped from their thrones and tossed in prison. In most places and times saying that would make me a revolutionary, but in the US it's not even arguably a crime.
hdhdhsjsbdh•1h ago
I think they should. Let’s kick off some meaningful economic growth in Europe and provide a counter to the increasingly hegemonic, anti-human US tech oligarchs that have reaped all of the financial rewards of algorithmic radicalization and surveillance capitalism for the past 20 or so years. Maybe Europe can imagine something better.
lazide•1h ago
That would require some hard choices and actual hard work. It’s got to get a lot worse before it gets better.
jabwd•1h ago
I don't know, you might be underestimating how much damage the orange in charge is really doing to the interests of the US. Change is slow, and the subtle things set in motion are always perceived too late. A simple example would be a small county in germany saving 5+ million a year thanks to moving away from microsoft. Add that to the budget of the many (largely european) opensource projects out there , and you can see things can shift, slowly, but rapidly once noticed.
wolvoleo•1h ago
In Holland I see a lot of defeatist attitude. "US big tech is so entrenched we'll never get away". "European cloud will never be good enough". "There's nothing like Microsoft 365". At my work they don't even want to think about alternatives.

I think they hope that MAGA will just blow over somehow. I don't see that happening.

lateforwork•1h ago
Even if MAGA goes away in 3 years when Trump (hopefully) goes away, the US will remain an oligarchy. Billionaire's interests comes before citizens' interests. This is because of a supreme court decision that allowed billionaires to buy elections. For this reason, even though I am American, I'd like to see European alternatives to US apps and services, because they are more likely to serve my interests.
okanat•22m ago
The big picture isn't that different in Europe. Most EU countries are also oligarchies, just with a lot more bloody histories and national traumas. The social safety net is kept to the level of remembrance of those traumas. Once people start forgetting them, the oligarchs will take away the rights one by one.

The response to US betrayal is weak because our oligarchs own lots and lots of investments in the US. Our banks invest in US treasuries and especially in the US real estate market. They then leverage those US investments against normal people in the EU and consolidate more and more power (and assets) and blame normal people for not having investments or not working enough. They are the ones who take away EU GDP and park it in US investment tools. Forming businesses is more risky in many EU countries due to extremely conservative policies of those same banks who prefer US investments instead.

Hikikomori•18m ago
It likely isn't over with him. Trump is just the frontman and possibly fall guy for project 2025/federalist society. They are his entire cabinet and their plan was to replace all government workers with their own loyal people.
Archelaos•9m ago
The problem are not Trump or the billionaires, but the majority of the American people who support them. They knew what they were getting.
Spivak•1h ago
Genuinely, what's the sell of Microsoft 365? I get MS Word, Excel whatever lock in but what is their cloud actually adding that can't be substituted?

Email, chat, video calling, and file storage? All products that have plenty of competitors. We went with 365 only because it was dirt cheap.

I would think weening off Windows and the AD "Entra" stack would be a lot harder than commodity office software but at least they can self host that.

Yoric•59m ago
And frankly, MS Word is really bad. So are pretty much of all their services.

Not sure whether Excel is still good.

hmry•46m ago
Being good is one thing, being compatible with existing files full of VBA macros is another.

Although MS themselves apparently don't realize that, considering how they push the web version which doesn't support them?

Telaneo•41m ago
Excel is really good for the wizards and for that one spreadsheet full of macros written by a wizard, which thus can't be ported over to Libreoffice or anything else. Many of those probably should Just™ be made into actual databases, but Excel is a lot more approachable than those, so you end up with giant spreadsheets instead.

For everybody else, Libreoffice is fine as far as functionality is concerned. UI might be another story, but that's worth getting over anyway, especially since a lot of people for whom this is a problem, would also have problems with getting away from Windows as a whole, just from buttons moving and things being different in general.

astrospective•18m ago
Porting involved Excel sheets into web apps has been a decent chunk of my dev career.
Sharlin•55m ago
It's adding the property that it's an all-in-one turnkey solution. Which is an extremely attractive proposition compared to having a dozen separate tools. And to paraphrase the old adage, nobody ever got fired for buying Microsoft.
kaveh_h•19m ago
Well maybe the old adage need to change
esperent•47m ago
> what's the sell of Microsoft 365

> We went with 365 only because it was dirt cheap

You answered your own question.

skocznymroczny•39m ago
The sell is that my manager can send an Excel spreadsheet to everyone and everyone can open the spreadsheet and edit it at the same times while seeing everyone else do their edits. What's the non-MS non-Google solution to this?
mjhay•33m ago
Anyone can edit it and it also might get randomly corrupted. It’s crap, especially if some people are on Macs.
Telaneo•27m ago
Open-Xchange supports collaborative editing of spreadsheets. Mailbox.org uses that for their email service, and you get access to their online office suite when you subscribe. I can't speak to the quality of the shared editing, but their online office suite is fine for basic stuff.
Hikikomori•21m ago
Zoho.
tchalla•40m ago
Everyone has been going gung ho about Canadian PM speech but the banger one for me personally is the Belgian PM. He said it best “Being a happy vassal state is one thing, being a miserable slave is another”. Europe deserves every bit what’s coming to them.
OKRainbowKid•30m ago
Can you elaborate how this statement led you to your conclusion?
tchalla•21m ago
I don’t understand your question. I’m assuming you are asking about the part “Europe deserves”. It’s simple really - for decades now Europe has been relying on US for military support. It’s a cardinal sin to do so if one wants an equivalent seat at the negotiating table. But the EU just can’t agree amongst themselves. Mercosur takes 30 years, India defence agreement has taken 20. The warning signs were there during 2016 but conveniently brushed. EU either acts together for the common good even if they don’t like something or continues to be bureaucratic, irrelevant old person. It’s slow agony at the moment.
rtsil•5m ago
The EU couldn't agree amongst themselves because the US (and its biggest vassal, the UK when it was in the EU) did everything to prevent such agreement.

We'll see what the States that were the most against any form of common European defense will do now that the US has proven unreliable. And if they are still under the delusion that the current US policies will go away, then it's time for Two-Speed Europe.

terminalshort•1m ago
Don't blame this on the UK. UK leave vote was a few months before the 2016 election, so the timing is convenient. But let's not pretend that it was anything but complacency (that was shattered by Trump) is to blame here.
Telaneo•38m ago
I'd imagine this attitude would start to disappear as soon as alternatives start being used. It's already happening to some extent, but it needs to trickle down into the general populace. The relevant names just aren't in people's minds yet (although there definitely are areas where there aren't exact 1-to-1 replacements available).
ummonk•19m ago
It’s amazing how complacent and weak-willed the European populace and political leaders are. Quite the contrast to Canada.
SpicyLemonZest•8m ago
I think you're misreading the source of the defeatism. It's clear what European leaders should do if they want to compete with US big tech. They should sit down with corporate leaders at Spotify, Ericsson, ASML, etc. and talk though what reforms are necessary for Europe to start minting unicorns as rapidly as the Americans can.

But European leaders haven't been willing to do this, perceiving (I think correctly) that European citizens won't tolerate the idea of asking rich CEOs for regulatory advice or making the creation of billionaires a policy goal. So instead they focus on the kind of pointless efforts described in the source article, where government agencies endlessly chase their tails on standards and objectives.

To the eternal frustration of governments and advocates around the world, there's no argument for why you should use domestic products that can adequately substitute for high-quality domestic products people want to use.

aa_is_op•1h ago
By the time the idiot EU bureaucrats get to do something, they'll be replaced by right-wing loonatics sponsored by US tech giants: https://www.brusselstimes.com/belgium/1916422/us-tech-giants...
Yoric•56m ago
Maybe?

I have friends working on IT in public administrations, starting to prepare for a switch from US tech to EU tech.

flanked-evergl•1h ago
Trump has been trying real hard to get Europe to stand on it's own, maybe they do it out of spite. Would be awesome if we could maybe kick Russia (which is much weaker than Europe I'm told) out of Ukraine.
johanneskanybal•54m ago
Trump is an obvious Russian agent. Stealing money for himself and destroying all western trust is his only goal.
nalekberov•50m ago
What Europe has got to do with Ukraine? Europe is much more dependent on Russia (for cheap energy resources) than it's on Ukraine, son. Besides, who forced EU to send billions of euros to Ukraine to fuel this pointless war - which only made Europe weaker than ever?
causalscience•22m ago
Russian propaganda folks.
dilyevsky•1h ago
Have they tried more regulation of the kind where your investment agreement has to be fully read out loud and in person by the notary to all parties?
thisislife2•1h ago
Everyone wants to, and not just from the US, but China too. Digital imperialism is real but nobody is confident yet how to effectively fight it. India especially is kind of trapped because our IT service industry is deeply entwined with the US and our government doesn't know how to safely untangle it from the US without harming our economy.
Anonyneko•1h ago
>In the Swedish coastal city of Helsingborg, for example, a one-year project is testing how various public services would function in the scenario of a digital blackout

Russia has been doing these blackout exercises for many years now all across the country, forcing major services to make serious changes to their infrastructure. I assume similar things happen regularly in Iran and China. Europe is incredibly late to the game, and doing random experiments in small towns is not even nearly enough. Weaning off government services is also not enough, physical networks have to be prepared for it, commercial services have to follow, and the general populace has to be incentivized to use them. Otherwise, the damage from a blackout will still be unsustainable. It doesn't sound democratic, but this should be treated as a matter of national security. That is, if self-reliance is an actual goal - waiting for things to possibly blow over is still an option, but this is one of those matters where I believe half-measures are worse than both of the extremes.

kemiller•42m ago
Ironically, Russia probing defenses in Europe is functioning like Chaos Monkey — revealing vulnerabilities and triggering hardening.
ls612•23m ago
It’s certainly doing the first, not so sure about the second.
Nextgrid•20m ago
The main vulnerability of the Western world isn't technical, it's that we voluntarily surrendered our communication and social fabrics to advertising-driven businesses that will happily host and promote anything as long as it generates engagement. This makes it trivial for foreign agents to sway public opinion where as back in the day influencing media required actual capital and connections.

Unfortunately, a lot of our own people (and especially politicians) make money out of this situation so there's very little incentive to change this. Just look at the reaction every time regulations designed to curtail Big Tech ad-driven monopolies (EU DMA, GDPR, etc) are discussed. Our greed is what makes us vulnerable.

terminalshort•4m ago
Who is the "we" that you think surrendered control here? Freedom of the press necessitates that anyone can publish freely even if what they publish is foreign propaganda.
whynotmaybe•17m ago
The second isn't publicly promoted.
dismalaf•1h ago
Europe wants a lot of things that they end up never actually doing.
13415•1h ago
It's more than just internet technology, though. Europe has no digital sovereignty at all. Every operating system is in US hands, most office and business software, Visa, Mastercard, Paypal, all social media commonly used, and so on. The list is endless.
johanneskanybal•58m ago
This is pretty basic tech to replicate if it's needed though. It wasn't needed before so we just used what was there. But crazy to think the place you spawned from 2k years ago couldn't make another basic payment system if it was important lol.
Sharlin•54m ago
It's not a technical problem (well, it is, but not primarily). It's a social problem. Replicating a technology is one thing. Getting thousands and thousands of organizations to migrate is in a whole different universe difficulty-wise. The costs would be astronomical.
mrsssnake•17m ago
Libre software should be used regardless. And the switching cost with it is still not low but drastically lower.
digiown•32m ago
Open source is basically sovereign (if Russia can use it), so there do exist functional alternatives for most of these things. It's mostly from inertia and network effects that the American ones are used.
Nextgrid•27m ago
Didn't Russia quickly spin up an alternative smartcard payment system and Android app store once they got kicked out of the US-based competitors?
jakkos•2m ago
> Every operating system is in US hands

Desktop Linux is (becoming) usable for a normal person just in time, I was surprised how easily a non-technical friend switched over to Bazzite (immutable fedora with gaming extras).

> Visa, Mastercard, Paypal

The EU has already been working on a "Digital Euro" for a while

> all social media commonly used

I'm hoping more decentralized social media continues to pick up steam

jaesonaras•58m ago
Support a dictator, and one day he will come for you.
ks2048•55m ago
So are tech companies (AWS, Microsoft, etc) confident that the rest of the world will never actually break up with them? How much of their revenue comes from Europe? Might they want to ask for some favors in exchange for their Trump bribes?
jlehman•46m ago
Yes, it’ll be much easier to put the surveillance measures they’ve been trying so hard for into EU-based companies.
yalogin•45m ago
As they should. It’s an incredible opportunity to develop technology natively and by extension wealth. The US has proven in this one year that it’s not to be trusted let alone relied upon. Unfortunately the tide once set in motion cannot be u done and the damage done in this one year is irreparable, may be now the tech billionaires will speak up and to use a phrase from Carney - take the sign down from their windows
Animats•43m ago
Most of this stuff is routine technology now. There's no reason for it to be centralized.
bell-cot•40m ago
Like the life-long couch potato who wants to exercise daily and really get into shape...there is that dratted gap between "wants to" and "does"
pveierland•39m ago
The tax authority in Norway alone employs 500 full-time software developers. If all of Europe followed France's example to adopt the UN Open Source Principles for all publicly funded development - and prioritized open formats + protocols + interoperability - it would within only a few years be possible to greatly improve software reliability for all nations.
digiown•29m ago
I wonder if it would work if the governments provide some tax incentives for open source contributions similar to charity donations as well.
irishcoffee•20m ago
Prompt: generate 15k in tax-deductible open source code contributions.

Result: all of our charities are being held hostage by ransomware.

digiown•10m ago
I meant something like, as a deduction from payroll taxes as a proportion of worked hours by the employee if he works on open source projects. Obviously not perfect but I don't think it's much worse than the existing R&D type schemes.
antxxxx•19m ago
UK government standards say that government software should be open source by default https://www.gov.uk/service-manual/service-standard/point-12-...
Nextgrid•4m ago
> followed France's example to adopt the UN Open Source Principles

Has this actually produced any tangible results?

I'm all in for interoperability, open source and such but the primary purpose of software is that it should work and actually achieve its task. I'm always skeptical of such top-down mandates where engineering principles or ideas are being pushed over tangible outcomes, as it usually leads to endless bikeshedding and "design by committee", while the resulting solution (if any is delivered before the budget runs out) is ultimately not fit for purpose.

thedelanyo•37m ago
Well they've finally awaken. Better late than never. I think this is one of the best decisions China got right.
subprotocol•32m ago
The scariest part of US internet dominance isn’t vendor lock-in, it’s executive branch chaos engineering.
whoknowsidont•32m ago
I mean good. The U.S. is currently run by a pedophile ring and has legitimate Nazi elements in its employ.

Also O365 just sucks. We can do better. We've had better. Please stop using MS products and technology stacks.

internet2000•31m ago
I've got no horse in this race, but, didn't they say the same things during the current US president's first term? Both about technology and defense. What came out of that?
Eupolemos•27m ago
Dane here.

Feelings are different now. IIRC, the most popular app in Denmark right now is an app that tells you if a product is American.

It has become broadly clear, that it is about self preservation.

taneq•26m ago
The wheels of Eurocrats turn slowly. (That was meant to be bureaucrats but autocorrect won this time. :D )
cyanydeez•28m ago
Fascism and business are poison and catalyst
tsoukase•8m ago
With the current speed of things, Europe will need a hundred years to effectively and totally set free from the US digital dominance. You will know if this timeframe gets shorter if a torrent of change, news and enthusiasm floods almost any European company, either IT or not, mobilize vertical and horizontal government agencies and a large share of the population actively participates.
293736729129•5m ago
Does the EU regime grant its subjects independence from chat control? Or do bureaucrats try to force it on the sovereign again and again?