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MVAR: Deterministic execution firewall for LLM agents (50 attacks blocked)

https://github.com/mvar-security/mvar
1•ShawnC21•44s ago•1 comments

Show HN: Extract (financial) data from emails with local LLM

https://github.com/brainless/dwata
1•brainless•1m ago•0 comments

2026 Staff Engineers Need to Get Hands-On Again

https://paulamuldoon.com/2026/03/10/2026-staff-engineers-need-to-get-hands-on-again/
1•PretzelFisch•2m ago•0 comments

Causal Video Models Are Data-Efficient Robot Policy Learners

https://www.rhoda.ai/research/direct-video-action
1•tintor•3m ago•0 comments

Microsoft embeds Edge into AI assistant, ignores questions about optin

https://www.theregister.com/2026/03/05/microsoft_adds_a_sidepane_for/
1•abawany•4m ago•0 comments

Should You Move to Sweden?

https://shouldyoumovetosweden.com/
1•iamEAP•5m ago•1 comments

Vancouver got rid of Daylight Savings

https://news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2026AG0013-000209
1•mostelato•5m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Timelog – C-native, fast, in-memory LSM-style time index for Python

https://github.com/VldChk/timelog
1•vld_chk•5m ago•0 comments

Ardunio's new AI-centric board is the VENTUNO Q

https://hackaday.com/2026/03/10/arduinos-new-ai-centric-board-is-the-ventuno-q/
1•geerlingguy•6m ago•0 comments

I Let AI Replace Me for a Week

https://substack.com/home/post/p-190492497
1•pr7vinas•6m ago•1 comments

New spherical flexure joint designs (compliant mechanisms) [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DAngcygU7tc
1•thunderbong•6m ago•0 comments

Winter getting shorter in 80% of major US cities, new data shows

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/feb/27/us-winters-getting-shorter
1•PaulHoule•7m ago•0 comments

Meta Acquired Moltbook

https://techcrunch.com/2026/03/10/meta-acquired-moltbook-the-ai-agent-social-network-that-went-vi...
1•rippeltippel•7m ago•0 comments

Paperclip – Open-source orchestration for zero-human companies

https://github.com/paperclipai/paperclip
1•devinfoley•8m ago•0 comments

Show HN: AgentUQ, a token-logprob runtime gate for LLM agents

https://github.com/antoinenguyen27/agentUQ
1•AntoineN2•8m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Point it at your local dev server, get a demo video with AI voiceover

https://demofly.ai
3•mhamann•8m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Streamsniff – diagnose and fix your streaming video quality

https://streamsniff.com
1•Sean-Der•11m ago•1 comments

Scientists Get a Glimpse of How New Pandemics Are Made

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/09/science/covid-coronavirus-evolution.html
1•Brajeshwar•11m ago•0 comments

Shift in Gulf Stream could signal the collapse of a major ocean current system

https://phys.org/news/2026-03-shift-gulf-stream-collapse-major.html
2•Brajeshwar•12m ago•1 comments

Faultline – distributed job queue with exactly-once execution guarantees

https://github.com/kritibehl/faultline
1•kritibehl•12m ago•1 comments

How to attract hummingbirds to your yard

https://www.popsci.com/environment/how-to-attract-hummingbirds-to-yard/
1•Brajeshwar•12m ago•1 comments

An ex-L3Harris Trenchant boss stole and sold cyber exploits to Russia

https://techcrunch.com/2025/11/03/how-an-ex-l3-harris-trenchant-boss-stole-and-sold-cyber-exploit...
2•tiahura•13m ago•0 comments

Ig Nobels ceremony moves to Europe over security concerns

https://arstechnica.com/science/2026/03/ig-nobels-ceremony-moves-to-europe-over-security-concerns/
1•voxadam•13m ago•1 comments

Ask HN: Are people shipping their AI "vibe-coded" apps to production?

1•infiniumtek•13m ago•0 comments

Nvidia and Thinking Machines Lab draw multi-year chip deal

https://www.siliconrepublic.com/business/nvidia-thinking-machines-lab-chip-deal-vera-rubin
2•wuschel•14m ago•1 comments

Infrastructure as Data: Why our OpenTofu main.tf has zero resources

https://medium.com/@heinancabouly/escaping-the-devops-concierge-trap-how-we-built-a-data-driven-s...
1•HeinanCA•14m ago•1 comments

Meta acquires AI agent social network Moltbook

https://www.reuters.com/business/meta-acquires-ai-agent-social-network-moltbook-2026-03-10/
3•tosh•16m ago•4 comments

The Flexible AI Agent Framework that keeps things simple

https://www.valiantlynx.com/blogs/machine-core-the-flexible-ai-agent-framework-that-keeps-things-...
2•madshalden•16m ago•0 comments

The truth behind the 2026 J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/eopA4MqhrE4dkLjHX/the-truth-behind-the-2026-j-p-morgan-healthcare...
1•surprisetalk•16m ago•0 comments

Kniterate Notes

https://soup.agnescameron.info//2026/03/07/kniterate-notes.html
1•surprisetalk•16m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

What happens when AI mediates everything?

1•spamsch•2h ago
I've been writing research notes on what happens when AI becomes infrastructural — not wrong or evil, just so competent and frictionless that contesting it starts to feel as strange as arguing with plumbing.

The scariest scenario isn't misalignment. It's a doctor who hasn't made an independent diagnosis in years. A student who has never experienced a blank page. A citizen whose appeal is reviewed by the same system that made the decision. Not because anyone planned it, but because the convenient path was always right there, and the alternatives quietly defunded themselves.

I built two interactive essays exploring this. The first lets you feel the erosion from inside — including a branching dialogue where every choice you make (even resisting) gets gently re-routed by a helpful system. The second asks what actually preserves curiosity, drawing on historical parallels: we've been here before with the printing press, industrialization, and mass media. Each time, the thing that worked wasn't rejection — it was deliberate cultivation of what efficiency would have erased.

One thought that stuck with me while building this: a monoculture isn't fragile because each plant is evil. It's fragile because diversity of response has been thinned. An AI-centered society might become brittle not because the assistant gives wrong answers, but because too many institutions share the same mediating substrate.

Pure static HTML. Loved seeing my thoughts come to live in an interactive way. Perhaps you might too. Either way let me know.

https://essays-about-the-future-with-ai.netlify.app/

Note about use of AI: I wrote down my throughts over the last few weeks. Then I had Opus 4.6 and GPT 5.4 also write down their thoughts over 30 distinct sessions each. Then I read the summary of the sessions and made some notes. And then had Opus combine my notes and their musings into a HTML page.

Comments

andsoitis•1h ago
> a monoculture isn't fragile because each plant is evil. It's fragile because diversity of response has been thinned.

Human culture needs dissent in order to advance.

spamsch•1h ago
Agreed — but the part that really worries me is that dissent doesn't just need to be allowed. It needs to be practiced.

We tend to think of dissent as something that's either permitted or suppressed. But there's a third state: dissent that's technically available but that nobody reaches for because the system works well enough that disagreement feels pointless.

That's the scenario I keep circling. Not a ban on questioning — just a world where questioning feels as odd as arguing with your GPS. You can. But why would you? It's usually right.

The monoculture metaphor is exactly about this. A field of identical crops doesn't prevent other plants from growing. It just leaves no space, no soil, no light for them. The suppression is structural, not intentional. And by the time you notice the fragility, the seed bank is empty. This is hoorifying.

andsoitis•1h ago
> We tend to think of dissent as something that's either permitted or suppressed.

Who is “we”?

spamsch•5m ago
Myself and other people in my peer group. And from there I am so bold to deduce that many in my society do.
kmg_finfolio•1h ago
The monoculture point is the one that stays with me. It's not that the answers get worse rather it's that the range of questions being asked quietly narrows. When the same substrate mediates how a doctor diagnoses, how a student drafts, how an analyst decides, you don't get one catastrophic failure. You get a slow convergence in how problems get framed in the first place. The historical parallel that comes to mind is the spreadsheet. It didn't make finance wrong, and it made certain ways of thinking about finance invisible. Decisions that didn't fit a row/column model stopped getting made, not because anyone chose that, but because the friction was asymmetric.