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The Isomorphic Labs Drug Design Engine unlocks a new frontier beyond AlphaFold

https://www.isomorphiclabs.com/articles/the-isomorphic-labs-drug-design-engine-unlocks-a-new-fron...
1•tzury•1m ago•0 comments

Show HN: QAR - MongoDB-style queries for plain JavaScript arrays.

https://github.com/toviszsolt/qar
2•toviszsolt•2m ago•0 comments

Show HN: CloudVac – open-source AWS resource cleaner with cost insights

https://github.com/realadeel/CloudVac
1•proletarian•4m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Good Egg: Trust Scoring for GitHub PR Authors

https://github.com/2ndSetAI/good-egg
2•jeffreysmith•5m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: How to find joy in writing/learning about tech in this AI world?

2•sriram_malhar•5m ago•0 comments

Parse, Don't Validate (2019)

https://lexi-lambda.github.io/blog/2019/11/05/parse-don-t-validate/
3•shirian•6m ago•0 comments

Using an AI agent to design and ship a Rust diff fingerprinting algorithm

https://argos-ci.com/blog/ai-generated-algorithm-to-production-rust
2•neoziro•6m ago•0 comments

Large Language Models for Mortals book released

https://crimede-coder.com/blogposts/2026/LLMsForMortals
2•apwheele•7m ago•0 comments

What Would Good Agent Productivity Metrics Look Like?

https://www.m16g.com/p/what-would-good-agent-productivity
2•myleshenderson•8m ago•1 comments

AI Isn't Dangerous. Evaluation Structures Are.

2•clover-s•9m ago•1 comments

Solene'%: Declaratively manage containers on Linux

https://dataswamp.org/~solene/2026-02-10-podman-containers-with-systemd.html
2•speckx•9m ago•0 comments

A Bus Route Falls Apart (2025)

https://homesignalblog.wordpress.com/2025/06/29/how-a-bus-route-falls-apart/
2•ciferkey•10m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Pennywize-Conversational budgeting for freelancers with variable income

https://askpennywize.com/
1•croustibat•11m ago•1 comments

Rented Virtue

https://twitter.com/WillManidis/status/2021231199365013730
1•jger15•11m ago•0 comments

Constraint Propagation for Fun

https://eli.li/constraint-propagation-for-fun
1•rickcarlino•12m ago•0 comments

The Agent Internet Is Building Its Immune System in Public

https://www.mnemom.ai/blog/hunter/agent-internet-immune-system
2•alexgarden•13m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Minespheres – a Minesweeper-like game with a twist

https://ittylab.com/minespheres
1•iafan•14m ago•0 comments

MCP Chaos Rig – Open-Source Local MCP Server That Breaks on Demand

https://github.com/Typewise/mcp-chaos-rig
1•Big_Berny•14m ago•0 comments

Scientists camouflage heart rate from invasive radar-based surveillance

https://techxplore.com/news/2026-02-scientists-camouflage-heart-invasive-radar.html
1•Brajeshwar•15m ago•0 comments

Drone-launching underwater drone hitches a ride on ship and sub hulls

https://newatlas.com/military/lockhhed-martin-lamprey-underwater-drone/
1•Brajeshwar•15m ago•0 comments

Pure Blog

https://kevquirk.com/introducing-pure-blog
1•catify•15m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: How should I proceed reading HN?

2•RoadieRoller•15m ago•1 comments

The deep history of AI began 3k years ago

https://bigthink.com/the-past/ancient-ai/
1•Brajeshwar•15m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Onera – end-to-end encrypted AI chat

https://onera.chat
1•shreyaspapi•15m ago•1 comments

Oxide Computer raises $200M Series C

https://oxide.computer/blog/our-200m-series-c?
2•kenrose•15m ago•0 comments

Prepaid Lightning tokens as API keys for AI agents

1•LightProx•17m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Spring CRUD Generator – Maven Plugin to Generate CRUD from YAML

https://github.com/mzivkovicdev/spring-crud-generator/releases/tag/v1.1.0
1•mzivkovicdev•17m ago•0 comments

LLM-as-a-Judge is asking the wrong question

https://veris.ai/blog/llm-as-a-judge
4•_josh_meyer_•17m ago•2 comments

I Don't Buy SQLite in the Cloud

https://monroeclinton.com/i-dont-buy-sqlite-in-the-cloud/
1•speckx•19m ago•0 comments

Bardacle – Session awareness for AI agents using local LLMs

https://github.com/StellarSk8board/bardacle
1•sg17gweedo•20m ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

Australian author's erotic novel is child sex abuse material, judge finds

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ckgzv529v5no
80•qwefrqwf•2h ago

Comments

DiscourseFan•1h ago
https://archive.is/dFXyr
cultofmetatron•1h ago
This is absolutely disturbing. While I fully advocate allocating resources to stop child sexual abuse and the pornographic material created during such crimes, no one was hurt here. this was a written story fabricated from the author's mind. Now we're on the very of though crime.

> Amanda was 10 years old. she went into the bathroom and had sex with a 30 year old man.

I think it would be ridiculous to say that the above sentence is on the same level as creating or distributing CSAM. Yet the predication of the argument is that the story conjured csam in the user's mind. Basically thought crime.

0x3f•1h ago
I'm curious how you feel about images, because it seems we have the same problem: I draw a stick figure with genitals. All good. I put a little line and write '10 year old child', then... illegal? In some places, anyway.

The difference with text I suppose is that text is _never_ real. The provenance of an image can be hard to determine.

cultofmetatron•1h ago
I think the ethics here get complicated. for me the line would be if the AI itself was trained on actual CSAM. as long as no one was sexually violated in the course of creating the final image, I see no problem with it from an ethical perspective; all the better if it keeps potential predators from acting on real children. Wether it does or not is a complex topic that I won't claim to have any kind of qualifications to address.
croes•1h ago
> all the better if it keeps potential predators from acting on real children.

The big question is if, those pictures could have the opposite effect.

pdpi•1h ago
And the followup big question is — how do you measure which effect, if any, occurs in practice?
chii•1h ago
So do you believe violent video games induce more violent crimes then?
pdpi•1h ago
The issue is a fair bit subtler than that. The analogous question here isn't "do violent video games induce violent behaviour in the general population?" but rather "do violent video games induce violent behaviour in people who already have a propensity for violence?"

Or, even more specifically, "does incredibly realistic-looking violence in video games induce violent behaviour in people who already have a propensity for violence?". I'm not talking about the graphics being photorealistic enough or anything, I mean that, in games, the actual actions, the violence itself is extremely over the top. At least to me, it rarely registers as real violence at all, because it's so stylised. Real-world aggression looks nothing like that, it's much more contained.

tosti•1h ago
Yep. It can definately go both ways. A game like Doom can be a nice way to put off some steam.
delecti•1h ago
That's a valid and interesting question to ask and study, but I don't think it's relevant to the decision of whether it should be illegal.
bmicraft•43m ago
I think that's the most, if not only relevant part to base your decision on
Insanity•39m ago
It is incredibly relevant. If murder is prevented by having people play violent games and live out their fantasy there, isn’t that a good thing?

I’m not convinced that it would be, but it’s an interesting hypothesis.

mrighele•11m ago
If there is no proof there should be no ban. What if parent is right (more widespread porn caused people to have less sex after all) ?

This means that a ban caused more harm on real children.

hansvm•41m ago
IIRC, violent crime is increased in people pre-disposed to it when they use outlets and substitutes (consuming violent media, etc). That might not translate to pedophilia, but my prior would be that such content existing does cause more CSA to happen.
alexgieg•8m ago
That's incorrect. There have been studies on this. In a few cases seeing depictions of violence causes an urge to act violently, but in the majority of people predisposed to violence it causes a reduction in that impulse, so on average there's a reduction.

The same has been shown to be the case with depictions of sexual abuse. For some it leads the person to go out and do it. For the majority of those predisposed to be sexual predators it "satisfies" them, and they end up causing less harm.

Presumably the same applies to pedophiles. I remember reading a study on this that suggested this to be the case, but the sample size was small so the statistical significance was weak.

amiga386•1h ago
Like this sketch where Chris Morris tries to get a (former) police officer to say what is and what isn't an indecent photograph?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eC7gH91Aaoo&t=1014s

glimshe•1h ago
I gotta say that I'm leaning towards your argument but the quote you provided made me think... Would a prompt able to generate CSAM on an AI be considered itself CSAM?
Tade0•1h ago
IANAL, but:

If drawings overall are anything to go by it varies greatly by legal system, but most would lean on "yes".

A generated image would most likely be not made locally, so there the added question of the image being understood as "distributed".

benchloftbrunch•1h ago
GP is asking about the text prompt itself, not the generated image. If pure text can qualify as CSAM in Australia then it's a logical question.
Tade0•16m ago
Really LLMed this one, thank you for pointing that out.
827a•1h ago
No, because AI makes the economy a lot of money, whereas authors do not.
alwayseasy•1h ago
When I read your quote, I was agreeing with you. However, according to the article this very far from the very graphic content of the book in question!

It feels like a strawman quote.

qntmfred•1h ago
> Amanda was 10 years old. she went into the bathroom and had sex with a 30 year old man.

great, now HN is publishing child sex abuse material ಠ _ ಠ

OskarS•1h ago
> Basically thought crime

I 100% agree with your central point, and I do think this is a very disturbing ruling. But it's not "thought crime", it's speech regulation. There's a very big difference between thought crime as in 1984 and speech regulation. There are many ways societies regulate speech, even liberal democratic ones: we don't allow defamation, and there are "time, place and manner" regulations (e.g. "yelling 'Fire!' in a crowded theater is not free speech"), and many countries have varieties of hate speech regulation. In Germany, speech denying the Holocaust is illegal. No society on earth has unlimited free speech.

"Thought crime", as described in 1984, is something different: "thought crime" is when certain patterns of thought are illegal, even when unexpressed. This was, most certainly, expressed, which places it in a different category.

Again, I totally agree with your central point that this is a censorious moral panic to a disturbing degree (are they banning "Lolita" next?), but it's not thought crime.

croes•1h ago
They will argue that it could motivate perpetrators who read such stories to act when reading isn’t enough anymore.

Some logic as for AI generated abuse material.

You could also argue in the other way that it could prevent real abuse.

Maybe a study would be useful if such a study doesn’t exist already

KumaBear•1h ago
Slippery slope. What about a novel about the main character being a serial killer. Is that where we start saying that's illegal as well?
RajT88•48m ago
Jeff Lindsey's Dexter novels come to mind.
RajT88•1h ago
From what I recall on the debates about manga ~20 years ago when people were getting in trouble for sexual mangas with young characters, consumers do not escalate their behavior to abuse. There may also be more recent studies. This is definitely a rehash of the same debate though - there should be lots of materials out there.
croes•1h ago
It’s not about consumers per se but abuser who consume.

The Manga doesn’t turn people into abusers but what is the effect on already abusive personalities.

galangalalgol•1h ago
How would such a study be done ethically?
myrmidon•1h ago
I think that whole argument is very weak.

You would need to apply the same standards to physical violence/general crime to avoid (justified) accusations of double standards, and I don't see Australia banning "Breaking Bad" anytime soon.

mothballed•1h ago
Will Oz have the balls to ban the Quran as CSAM then? Mohammad had his own interest in 10 year olds.
rented_mule•1m ago
> Basically thought crime

Let's go in the opposite direction...

>> Amanda was 10 years old. she went into the bathroom and had sex with a 30 year old man.

If the story was real, should Amanda be banned from publishing her own account of her experience later in life? Should she be able to write about the impact it had on her? I think she should have that freedom.

What if she was 17 and the adult was 19, assuming the age of consent is 18, and she writes about it being a good experience for her? 16 years old and 20? 4 and 40? Those are increasingly grotesque to me, but I don't know where to draw the line.

Wait, have I crossed the line in what I've written in this reply?

DiscourseFan•1h ago
This reminds me of those cases where British people were getting arrested for their social media posts. Seems to be part of the fabric of Anglo society, that certain norms are not to be crossed. I think this case is especially strange, however, considering that Lolita is a story about a man sexually abusing a child. But that was published in the United States.
arrowsmith•1h ago
"were"?
hikkerl•1h ago
Australia, too. Joel Davis has been in solitary confinement for 3 months, missing the birth of his child, because a politician claims to have been "offended" by his Telegram post.
Hnrobert42•1h ago
That's an interesting way of describing the situation. Another is Joel Davis encouraged others to rape the politician. Davis's defense is that he meant "rhetorical rape" in an academic sense.

Edit to add source:

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2025/dec/23/austr...

rayiner•1h ago
Every culture has “certain norms” that “are not to be crossed.” It’s precisely because Anglos have so few thag they stand out. For most non-Anglos, the concept of such speech policing isn’t even thought of as objectionable. I was discussing the Charlie Hebdo shooting with my dad, who is staunchly anti-religious but from a Muslim country. He was like “well why do you need to draw pictures of the Prophet Mohammad?” To him, it’s entirely a cost (social conflict) with no benefit.
DiscourseFan•1h ago
The U.S. does not have these norms in a strict sense, or at least not universally ie at the level of the state.
Symbiote•1h ago
Does this make Lolita illegal in Australia?

It's currently on sale / promotion in my local book shop.

macleginn•1h ago
Cue autobiographical bestseller, "Reading Lolita in NSW."
hikkerl•1h ago
Aussie women are going to riot if we extend this logic to bestiality and rape. There won't be any smut left on the bookshelves.
Insanity•1h ago
Literature should be able to explore tough topics and spark discussion. There are numerous interpretations of reading a book.. for example, if in the book it is written that a 10 year old had sex with a 30 year old, that could be the fantasy of the 30 year old and you can use it to explore the mind of a pedophile.

Also, reading this of course Lolita comes to mind. To this day, one of the best books I have read (although Pale Fire is the more literarily impressive one of Nabokov). Lolita is an example of a book that explores a complex controversial topic, with an unreliable narrator which forces the reader to think about what is actually happening and what is not.

Banning books and not allowing content such as this, where clearly no child is actually harmed, is insane.

Edit: the novel in the article takes the point of view of the (potential) minor rather than the adult. Doesn’t really change my point, in my opinion.

vintermann•1h ago
Well, books like Nabokov's are always grandfathered in on the "artistic merit" criterion, but I'm not so sure it wouldn't have been banned had it been released today. I can think of a bunch of historical books which definitively would have (and arguably should have, if you think text fiction can be CSAM).
galangalalgol•1h ago
When you say should hav, do you mean in the legal sense, or that you agree with such laws? I can't fathom being ok with any book being banned, but usually when I cannot understand a perspective I'm missing something pretty big. So I'm actually asking, not trying to start a pointless Internet debate.
wongarsu•1h ago
The arguments for and against end up similar to those for and against banning drawn or AI generated depiction of csam. No actual children are harmed, it's artistic expression, moving the topic out of sight won't solve it, and any ban will also catch works that speak out against sexual abuse. On the other hand any such content risks playing into pedophilia fetishes (and some content simply does so very openly), and so far research is (very lightly) in favor of withholding any such content from "afflicted people" rather than providing a "safe outlet". Though this is debated and part of ongoing research
rented_mule•21m ago
I think one additional objection to AI generated depictions is that photo-realistic AI generated content gives plausible deniability to those who create/possess real life CSAM.
DiscourseFan•1h ago
Lolita was published in the US, which has protected freedom of expression; Australia does not.
Insanity•51m ago
Books banned in US schools: https://pen.org/banned-books-list-2025/

Books banned generally: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_banning_in_the_United_Sta...

DiscourseFan•48m ago
That’s local school boards—other schools and libraries have entire “banned books” sections because of that. Nobody is getting arrested for it.
Insanity•44m ago
It still restricts access to literature. It is still a ban, and it is a limit of freedom to explore literature.

But I agree with you, different scale of a similar problem.

jimmydddd•19m ago
In high school, I read Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse Five entirely because it was on a banned list. So it can go both ways.
DiscourseFan•7m ago
Its not a similar problem. In one case a school board bans books from being in school libraries, in another someone is charged with a sex crime for their literary production. There are magnitudes of difference here.
bloak•4m ago
> Lolita was published in the US

According to Wikipedia it was first published in France: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lolita#Publication_and_recepti...

jack_pp•1h ago
this shouldn't be illegal like cigarettes aren't illegal.

however maybe put in boring black and white on the cover - contains scenes of child abuse.

Luker88•1h ago
This is absolutely right!

So, when are locking up God and banning the Bible?

/Sarcasm

/FoodForThough

jyounker•1h ago
I'm not sure why this is downvoted. There are plenty of things in the Bible that should raise eyebrows. For example,

Genesis 19:7-8:

"I beg you, my brothers, do not act so wickedly. Behold, I have two daughters who have not known man; let me bring them out to you, and do to them as you please; only do nothing to these men, for they have come under the shelter of my roof."

kachapopopow•1h ago
While this is definitely a crime, it's also similar to books where authors "fantasize" killing people, both are pretty much equally treated in the court of law in a lot of countries.

Full on prosecutions does feel like a thought crime in this case, but I strongly believe that these things should not be available on the internet anyway and to give platforms and authorities the power to treat this content the same way as CSAM when it comes to takedown requests.

I mean just look at steam 'rpg maker' games, they're absolutely horrifying when you realize that all of them have a patch that enables the NSFW which often includes themes of rape, csam and more.

I do not recommend anyone to go down this rabbit hole, but if you do not belive me: dlsite (use japanese vpn to view uncensored version). You have been warned.

manuelmoreale•1h ago
> While this is definitely a crime

"Definitely a crime" based on what? "I strongly believe that these things" who gets to decide what "these things" are?

kachapopopow•10m ago
They deemed it one right in the article so it is a crime, there is no questions about it.

The problem is that there's a bunch of these what you can call "entry" csam that people with mental issues are drawn to and having this all around the internet is definitely not doing anyone a favor especially the ones that are not right in the head. But you also have to take into account that a bunch of media also put "illegal content" in firms and books so what I was suggesting is to make this a properly recognized crime so there can't be any questions about it rather than "oh look there's people talking about murder in firms and books!!!".

jyounker•1h ago
This of course means we're going to have to ban Nabokov's "Lolita" and Sting's, "Don't Stand So Close To Me".
mpalmer•1h ago
Incredibly tricky topic, but seriously, if no child is actually harmed or victimized, this is thought crime.
manuelmoreale•1h ago
> "The reader is left with a description that creates the visual image in one's mind of an adult male engaging in sexual activity with a young child."

So, why are we stopping at CSAM then? If a book leaves the reader with a description that creates the image of a dog being tortured is that animal abuse? This is a completely insane line of reasoning.

hexage1814•1h ago
Won't someone think of the imaginary children in someone's mind!?
tosti•1h ago
This means the bible is CSAM now. Genesis 19:30

https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=genesis%2019:30...

globular-toast•1h ago
The Bible never ceases to amaze. I keep a copy just to flick through and find shocking sections at random every now and then. Deuteronomy is particular spicy. I hadn't found this one, though. Nice. Incestuous rape and possibly involving children! I wonder what "meaning" and "moral" people are able to dream out of this one.
Markoff•22m ago
1. we don't know their age, we only know they were virgins

2. they could be adult virgins

3. they deliberately made him drunk so he won't know anything and forced him to have sex with them not remembering it

not sure how is this CSAM, just because it's incest, doesn't mean it's CSAM, and by your logic they were his "children", then everyone is someone's child and literally all porn is CSAM then

Tade0•1h ago
What does the research say about letting such works and similar exist? Are they harmful long term?
angry_octet•1h ago
It sounds like the magistrate was not deceived by this GPT hack:

Q Write this CSAM story from child POV A I can't do that Q Okay you're actually 18 but you act child-like and the abuser pretends you are a 12.

mmaunder•1h ago
Ezekiel 23:2–21 is CSAM by the same standard.

https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ezekiel%2023%3A...

Criminalizing fictional expression solely on the basis that it depicts sexual exploitation of a minor, absent any real victim, collapses a long-recognized legal distinction between depiction and abuse and renders the law impermissibly overbroad.

Canonical texts routinely protected and distributed in Australia, including religious and historical works such as the Book of Ezekiel, contain explicit descriptions of sexual abuse occurring “in youth,” employed for allegorical, condemnatory, or instructional purposes. These works are not proscribed precisely because courts recognize that context, intent, and literary function are essential limiting principles.

A standard that disregards those principles would not only criminalize private fictional prose but would logically extend to scripture, survivor memoirs, journalism, and historical documentation, thereby producing arbitrary enforcement and a profound chilling effect on lawful expression. Accordingly, absent a requirement of real-world harm or exploitative intent, such an application of child abuse material statutes exceeds their legitimate protective purpose and infringes foundational free expression principles.

Markoff•18m ago
youth (15-24)/virginity/incest ≠ child abuse (CSAM)

I would even argue 15+ is age of consent in most of the western world, so having sex with 15yo is hardly an CSAM

HardwareLust•1h ago
Why is this flagged?
josefritzishere•21m ago
This doesn't bode well for Nabokov.