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Engineering over Enforcement

https://www.contraption.co/engineering-over-enforcement/
1•philip1209•1m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Tune on a real Boss TU-3

https://realtuner.online/
1•smith-kyle•1m ago•0 comments

Can coding agents relicense open source through a "clean room" implementation?

https://simonwillison.net/2026/Mar/5/chardet/
2•MindGods•1m ago•0 comments

B.C.'s daylight-time decision: 'Scientifically a bad idea,' says key researcher

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/bc-daylight-saving-health-concerns-9.7114947
1•LostMyLogin•4m ago•1 comments

Canon's rumored retro camera could be its own X Half

https://m.dpreview.com/articles/1229448777/canon-analog-concept-camera-cpplus-x-half
1•PaulHoule•4m ago•0 comments

Malicious NPM "Sandworm" packages targeting AI toolchains and DevSecOps

https://phoenix.security/sandworm-mode-npm-supply-chain-worm/
1•nuzzl•5m ago•1 comments

Show HN: I built an AI tool that analyzes your Discogs vinyl collection

https://recordsv.lt
1•herrstagl•5m ago•0 comments

Spectre I prevents smart devices and AI recorders from picking up your voice

https://www.deveillance.com/
1•world2vec•5m ago•0 comments

Google isn't waiting – the 30 percent Android app store fee is dead

https://www.theverge.com/policy/889252/google-app-store-fee-reduction-20-percent-epic-v-google
2•agent86•6m ago•1 comments

Cameras built to police Iranians became the regime's Achilles' heel

https://royapakzad.substack.com/p/youre-welcome-mr-supreme-leader
2•benbreen•7m ago•0 comments

Infinite Jest belongs in the techno-optimist canon

https://danco.substack.com/p/infinite-jest-belongs-in-the-techno
1•surprisetalk•8m ago•0 comments

I made my whole-home humidifier slightly less terrifying [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tCVsyY5TRQI
1•surprisetalk•8m ago•0 comments

Archival Selves

https://contraptions.venkateshrao.com/p/archival-selves
1•surprisetalk•8m ago•0 comments

GitHub Copilot is now #3 in VS Code installs behind Claude/OpenAI

https://twitter.com/AznWeng/status/2029575624591913132
1•AznHisoka•8m ago•0 comments

Comprehensive check and Productivity tool for vibecoders. Has a team mode too

https://github.com/akshan-main/vibe-check/blob/main/README.md
1•frutigeraerosol•8m ago•1 comments

Research shows 41 US states are getting warmer, all in slightly different ways

https://phys.org/news/2026-02-states-warmer-slightly-ways.html
1•bikenaga•8m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Selva – Amazon for AI Agents

https://www.useselva.com/
1•jpbonch•9m ago•0 comments

Galileo's handwritten notes found in ancient astronomy text

https://www.science.org/content/article/galileo-s-handwritten-notes-found-ancient-astronomy-text
1•tzury•9m ago•0 comments

So what project management tool you use to orchestrate your agent team?

1•autojunjie•10m ago•1 comments

Minimizing user research fraud in the age of agentic AI

https://www.buttonevents.com/blog/minimizing-user-research-fraud-in-the-age-of-agentic-ai
1•verdverm•11m ago•0 comments

My Git-worktree setup using worktrunk and caddy

https://xata.io/blog/my-git-worktree-setup-using-worktrunk-and-caddy
1•gk1•12m ago•0 comments

Pair Programming Is Having a Renaissance

https://twitter.com/dabit3/status/2029595180882698740
1•dabit3•13m ago•0 comments

The Great Transition

https://danielmiessler.com/blog/the-great-transition
1•gmays•14m ago•0 comments

Reverse-Engineering O2Jam Network

https://dev.cxo2.me/reversing-o2jam-network/
1•speps•14m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Ouroboros – Post-quantum P2P messenger with zero servers

https://github.com/OmarPrampolini/Ouroboros
1•OmarPrampolini•15m ago•0 comments

How can a MacBook Neo cost the same as an iPhone 17e?

https://www.reddit.com/r/hardware/s/TKr7XxexBU
1•nixass•15m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Android tablet, iPad or e-ink tablet, which device for reading?

1•Bridged7756•16m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Tracemap – run and visualize traceroutes from probes around the world

https://tracemap.dev/
2•solhuang•16m ago•2 comments

Live Metadata for What's Playing on Every Station Is Here

https://audiophile.fm/blog/live-metadata-currently-playing-internet-radio
1•bojanvidanovic•16m ago•0 comments

GitHub Actions is shitting the bed again

https://www.githubstatus.com/incidents/g5gnt5l5hf56
6•drcongo•18m ago•2 comments
Open in hackernews

BBC says 'irreversible' trends mean it will not survive without major overhaul

https://www.theguardian.com/media/2026/mar/05/bbc-charter-renewal-tv-licence-major-overhaul
17•beardyw•1h ago

Comments

ChocolateGod•1h ago
I refuse to pay the license fee and watch BBC content simply because how TV licensing is enforced is grotesque and the cover ups of child molesters committed by the BBC.

Put it behind a subscription and give me a choice whether the BBC deserves its revenue, my current opinion falls firmly on no.

felixgallo•48m ago
I'm sure you feel the same way about Sky News and the tabloids, right?
pjc50•43m ago
You're not legally required to pay for either of those simply because you own a television.

I have a lot of love for the BBC and its history, but the license fee is very difficult to justify.

nailer•47m ago
I refuse to because they have very consistently relayed communication from Hamas as news without attributing the source is Hamas. As a result a significant quantity of my left leaning friends in the UK have extreme takes on the war in Gaza.
dgxyz•44m ago
100% this. They published straight up misinformation as fact first, announced it as breaking news, pushed it to BBC app, then corrected it all later then pretended nothing happened.

I don't pay for a license because the programming is crap now though.

mrexcess•34m ago
>They published straight up misinformation as fact first

Can you add some specifics to this claim? I'm unaware of the BBC having reported "Hamas-sourced" substantial misinformation as fact. I'm sure some errors and retractions have been done - especially given that BBC like all Western media continues to be forbidden to operate freely in Gaza.

dgxyz•28m ago
During the Al-Ahli Arab Hospital incident they posted an entirely unverified and unattributed story stating that the cause was an Israeli air strike, pushed this as breaking news and 43 minutes later changed the attribution to Hamas and PIJ sources confirmed.

This lead to two of my female Jewish friends getting spat on and having their hair pulled on the tube and called murdering zionists.

This happens a lot with the BBC in the rush to publish. It is not an excusable situation. There are real consequences. The decline is parallel to the rise in social media and moving the news teams out of London and attention dynamics.

You can find a list of problems in the corrections and clarifications here - work through 2023 to 2025: https://www.bbc.co.uk/helpandfeedback/corrections_clarificat...

pjc50•12m ago
> This lead to two of my female Jewish friends getting spat on and having their hair pulled on the tube and called murdering zionists

Do you think this is specifically and only due to that specific, single story, or do you think it might be a cumulative effect due to all the rest of what's been happening? Not that this excuses or justifies random attacks on other people simply because they happen to be Jewish, that's how the cycle of reprisal happens.

mrexcess•37m ago
>I refuse to because they have very consistently relayed communication from Hamas as news without attributing the source is Hamas.

I'm a US-ian and have no particular dog in this hunt, but could you relate any instances where this led to the British public being significantly misinformed about a major event?

Everything I've seen, including recent statements from the Israeli government, indicate that the Gaza Health Ministry (often referred to by Israel-sympathetic press as part of Hamas, rather than part of the government of Gaza which Hamas currently dominates) death toll statistics from the Gaza war were largely accurate.

Is there a case of BBC reporting "Hamas-sourced" information in a way that was notably harmful to the British public's truthful understanding of the conflict?

IG_Semmelweiss•46m ago
How, dare I ask, does one "opt out" of a govt subscription service ?

Some private companies make it so hard these days (Adobe & NYT being the kings of subcription dark patterns), I am curious how the process goes with a govt entity like the BBC ?

dgxyz•45m ago
One tells them to fuck off when they turn up at the door. And off they fuck.
CommanderData•38m ago
The BBC also behaved indefensibly when covering Israel's genocide of Palestinians.

Their behaviour is largely what led to me siding with the Palestinians plight some years ago, the use of words on Israel's side VS Palestinians was enough to lead me down a rabbit hole and I have never seen the BBC the same since.

It is literally state news with amazing bits of other content.

rvz•1h ago
Sounds like cope.
blargthorwars•1h ago
Imagine needing a government licence to look at a screen.
graemep•55m ago
Its a hypothocated tax.

Its not required to "look at a screen". its required to watch broadcast TV and use the BBc's online TV services. You can watch as much as you like on Youtube or Netflix or whatever without paying it.

it was very good value for money when half of all TV output (and the better half) was from the BBC and ad free.

mytailorisrich•34m ago
> You can watch as much as you like on Youtube or Netflix or whatever without paying it.

Careful here because there is live TV on Youtube and a valid licence is required to watch that. There are also live shows on Netflix, which may count as "live TV programmes" so requiring a licence.

IAmBroom•25m ago
You're moving the goalposts.

Watching non-live BBC programmes in the UK legally requires a license fee. The same is not true of Netflix.

beardyw•54m ago
It's a historical accident. At first there was no TV, so when the BBC started broadcasting I suppose it made sense. Moving away from that seems to be difficult without them introducing advertising for live TV, which would be a quick fix, but that seems to be a diminishing market.

For streaming it's easy to manage.

tokai•50m ago
It's not an accident. Funding state media with a licence fee instead of from the taxes/state budget, makes it harder to exert political control over said state media.
beardyw•3m ago
Yes, good point.
nephihaha•52m ago
You mean like digital ID? Don't worry, we'll all need it to watch screens soon.

In Turkey and Israel you need a licence for radios as well.

oxfordmale•55m ago
I am happy to pay for the BBC licence fee if they stop harassing old grannies.
SirFatty•47m ago
How about the young grannies?
nephihaha•54m ago
I have not paid for the TV licence in over twenty years. I refuse to pay for state propaganda and repeats from forty or fifty years ago.
dmix•53m ago
> the corporation said 94% of people in the UK continued to use the BBC each month, but fewer than 80% of households contributed to the licence fee.

That's a pretty good ratio no? Plenty of services survive with lower ratios than that. Do they really expect every household to pay? Or is the issue they have much bigger spending plans than they make from it.

pjc50•44m ago
They're legally require to do so! People are sent to jail for not paying the tax! https://www.theguardian.com/media/2024/feb/29/tv-licence-fee...

(what that stat actually means is that the missing 14% are pensioners who are exempt)

xvxvx•42m ago
Easy fix: make the BBC a paid subscription and let people choose.
pjc50•38m ago
Personally I'd choose an arbitrary point like the year 2000, and split the BBC into "heritage" (nationalized body that holds all the archives, like the British Library or the British Museum), BBC Radio (taxpayer funded by DCMS, this is not very expensive) and "continuity TV" (commercial body that has to fund itself like any other).

This does mean Doctor Who getting split in half, but that's not the worst that's happened to him/her.

yesfitz•34m ago
The BBC's Annual Plan for 2025/2026[1] is an interesting read.

They spend a lot of money (billions) on making and delivering content, but that's still not much compared to other large for-profit media companies[2].

The TV License has been the model since World War II[3], and the entire mass media landscape has completely changed since then.

The proposals to replace the TV License with ads or subscriptions are enshittification. The BBC is not a for-profit media company and should not be treated like one. It is a soft-power organization (cynically: propaganda arm) for the British government. There isn't anything inherently wrong with spreading your government's/culture's messages, especially when it's as obvious as the BBC, but it should not be expected to make money. How much is it worth that Britain stays relevant throughout the Anglosphere and beyond? Or that British points of view are available everywhere with a shortwave radio or VPN?

So fund it like it's defense spending. Maybe if the next leader of a foreign country has a fondness for Del Boy or Red Dwarf, negotiations will go a little more smoothly.

As an American, I think I'd prefer having an official propaganda arm like the BBC instead of whatever quiet public-private partnerships (cynically: backroom deals) we have instead. I'd hate it, but it'd be good to have something concrete to direct my criticism at, instead of constantly wondering if NPR is really presenting unbiased facts or the movie about our Navy jet fighters being the best, most freedom-loving planes flown by handsome rascals is just a good time.

1: https://www.bbc.co.uk/aboutthebbc/documents/bbc-annual-plan-...

2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/21st_Century_Fox#

3: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Television_licensing_in_the_Un...

comrade1234•34m ago
I didn't pay the license fee here in Switzerland for a long time because I didn't have a tv or radio (I guess they didn't know about my car). In 2019 (I think) they just said 'fuck it, everyone pays' and changed it so you pay whether you have a tv or radio.

I could say that I don't watch Swiss tv but then the tv series Tschugger came out and made a few years of payments worth it. Otherwise it's just watching endless Jass (Swiss card game) tournaments.

mamonster•16m ago
Serafe is completely crazy. For business it's based on turnover, so every financial company gets screwed. And for students 300 CHF is half your semester cost if my memory serves me right.
rich_sasha•24m ago
People complain about the BBC's bias. And since everyone has a different idea of what "unbiased" looks like, it's almost impossible to please everyone.

But it struck me how few serious, general, global news outlets there are left in the world that aren't tied to some major interest. Fox News, CNN, WSJ... So much stuff is owned by Murdoch or by some other mogul. The Guardian is pretty good IMO but does not even pretend not to have a lefty skew.

I was thinking about the spiral of death that happens to so many media outlets where serious news doesn't pay the bills anymore, so they either have to rent themselves out to some deep pocket, or chase clicks for ads, losing veracity in the process.

BBC is one of the few organisations left that's somewhat immune to that. I won't claim all their stuff is unbiased, but they're just as likely to publish something left- as right-biased. So now I'm rooting for them and hope they make it. Apparently it is the second most trusted news source in the US, right after the Weather Channel. So truly a global phenomenon: https://yougov.com/en-us/articles/52272-trust-in-media-2025-...

pjc50•8m ago
The news coverage is in general OK compared to commercial news, and especially to US propaganda outfits, but Channel 4 (also public sector) are also pretty good. The UK politics coverage is abysmal. They have become cautious stenographers and promoters of whichever party Farage is heading at the time. Not surprising when you see what happens to reporting that genuinely challenges power.
abanana•23m ago
The BBC continually tries to convince the government that their problems are due to illegal action that must be stopped.

They do everything in their power to distract from the real issue - that the landscape of television has changed beyond recognition since the tax was brought in.

It's completely clear to everybody that the TV licence is an outdated model that makes no sense in today's world of competing commercial streaming services, but they're desperate to control the narrative to avoid losing their income stream. Which is understandable I suppose, from their narrow point of view. But for the country's point of view, we need a politician with balls, to step up and reform the system. But I'm not sure those even exist anymore.