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Congestion Pricing for WDC?

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2026/03/15/congestion-pricing-dc-tax-bowser-mayor/
1•paulpauper•13s ago•0 comments

EU Inc.: A new harmonised corporate legal regime

https://commission.europa.eu/topics/business-and-industry/doing-business-eu/company-law-and-corpo...
1•guidoiaquinti•2m ago•0 comments

Mass AI opinions engine for research, product and strategy

https://github.com/thingsthat/mass
2•jprosser•3m ago•0 comments

TaskyBear: AI Agent for To-Do Planning and Habit Tracking

https://openinapp.link/taskybear-app
1•kravixstudio•5m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Snare – honeytokens that fire at credential resolution, not API call

https://github.com/peg/snare
1•trevxr•6m ago•1 comments

We're building a better rich text editing toolkit

https://handlewithcare.dev/pitter-patter/
1•smoores•6m ago•1 comments

I haven't used a mouse for 14 years

https://axelk.ee/i-havent-used-a-mouse-for-14-years-and-how-to-enable-three-fingers-drag-on-macos/
2•speckx•8m ago•0 comments

AI chatbots often validate delusions and suicidal thoughts, study finds

https://www.ft.com/content/7f635a68-3b2a-4e4f-ae3d-926ff06ff068
3•1vuio0pswjnm7•10m ago•1 comments

OpenMAIC: Open Multi-Agent Interactive Classroom

https://open.maic.chat/
1•kothariji•10m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Realism – A goal-execution interface that builds live apps from prompts

https://github.com/sapiom/Showcase/tree/main/Realism
1•yash_nadge•10m ago•1 comments

Why One Key Shouldn't Rule Them All: Threshold Signatures for the Rest of Us

https://eric.mann.blog/why-one-key-shouldnt-rule-them-all-threshold-signatures-for-the-rest-of-us/
2•eamann•11m ago•0 comments

Heroku-Like Experience for Kubernetes

https://alfredtm.github.io/2026/03/17/kubernetesless/
2•theMMaI•12m ago•1 comments

Show HN: RepoRadar, job search by tech stack. upload resume get results

https://reporadar-app.netlify.app/
2•mnraynor90•13m ago•4 comments

Antikythera Mechanism

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antikythera_mechanism
1•tosh•13m ago•0 comments

Nvidia CEO Reaffirms Commitment to Israel: "We Support You – We Are Behind You"

https://www.jfeed.com/news/tc2wg8
3•mhb•15m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Will my flight have Starlink?

7•bblcla•15m ago•0 comments

I dug into the Flipper One's firmware, and it's a pocket Linux PC

https://www.xda-developers.com/dug-into-flipper-one-firmware-not-flipper-zero-sequel/
3•theblazehen•17m ago•0 comments

SecDB

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Dubno
1•tosh•17m ago•0 comments

Iran's South Pars Gas Field Is Attacked by Israel, Sending Energy Prices Soaring

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/18/world/middleeast/israel-strikes-south-pars-gas-oil-prices.html
4•spaghetdefects•17m ago•1 comments

As AI keeps improving, mathematicians struggle to foretell their own future

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/as-ai-keeps-improving-mathematicians-struggle-to-foret...
1•ivansavz•19m ago•0 comments

Management Craft: A Talking Management Library

https://www.managementcraft.co
2•rafaelc•19m ago•0 comments

FFC: Social Media Without Algorithms, Moderators, or Special People

https://alnewkirk.com/frameworks/ffc
1•iamalnewkirk•19m ago•0 comments

FifthForceFramework

https://github.com/kwesting4/wake-up-protocol
1•kwesting4•20m ago•0 comments

Scaling Btrfs to petabytes in production: a 74% cost reduction story

https://thenewstack.io/btrfs-petabyte-cost-reduction/
1•motiejus•20m ago•0 comments

Assign tasks to Claude from anywhere in Cowork

https://support.claude.com/en/articles/13947068-assign-tasks-to-claude-from-anywhere-in-cowork
2•iBelieve•22m ago•0 comments

How HN: Ironkernel – Python expressions, Rust parallel

https://github.com/YuminosukeSato/ironkernel
1•acc_10000•23m ago•1 comments

AI Coding Is Gambling

https://notes.visaint.space/ai-coding-is-gambling/
1•speckx•23m ago•0 comments

I Gave My AI Agent $25 and Told It to Buy Me a Gift

https://thoughts.jock.pl/p/ai-agent-shopping-experiment-real-money-2026
1•joozio•23m ago•0 comments

Cadillac's F1 journey: 'Our Silverstone shakedown was a miracle'

https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2026/mar/03/cadillac-f1-valtteri-bottas-sergio-perez-graeme-lowdon
1•PaulHoule•24m ago•0 comments

OpenCLI – control Electron and web apps from the CLI or AI agents

https://github.com/jackwener/opencli
1•jackwener•24m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

North Korean's 100k fake IT workers net $500M a year for Kim

https://www.theregister.com/2026/03/18/researchers_lift_the_lid_on/
53•speckx•1h ago

Comments

SayThatSh•1h ago
It's pretty impressive how far American salaries go in other countries. Between thousands of applications, if you manage to snag a single IT role with a larger corp you're potentially getting the local equivalent of dozens of people's regular income.
downrightmike•31m ago
And it still doesn't come close to the value provided to the company
woah•1h ago
How are these IT workers fake? Sounds like they are really doing the job.
vlovich123•55m ago
Reminds me of the Key & Peele sketch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jgYYOUC10aM

> Once employed in a full-time role, fake workers are often very successful, since they sometimes have multiple people helping them to produce their work, with the hope of getting a promotion and gaining more privileged access to the IT systems.

I think the "fake" part is the long term play to get enough privilege to presumably perform a cybersecurity attack. But less "fake" and more "spy" from the description - the outlined scheme is literally what spies agencies do.

dralley•51m ago
Well, it sounds like they are effectively slaves to the government, who is raking in their income on their behalf, and would presumably be able to "activate" them as an insider threat at some point.
spwa4•48m ago
Well, it is (highly) illegal for them to do this. So they presumably lie about everything, like name, location, ...

Perhaps fake is not the correct word, but the actual individuals are likely to have more than a few faked details. They do exist, of course.

It's also very dubious becuase, well, would you really hire a worker from an organization that also does things like hack hospitals and then hold systems hostage for bitcoin?

gradyfps•42m ago
To be fair, "illegal" here doesn't matter. North Korea doesn't follow American law.
spwa4•33m ago
Obviously, when working you have to follow the law both in the country where you live and the country where you work. Even in the case of remote work. Sadly, even if you just consult. So you can be pretty sure: highly illegal.
ambicapter•28m ago
Weird take on legality. They're working American jobs, breaking American law. Yes it matters.
NoMoreNicksLeft•5m ago
If we could prosecute and incarcerate them, how likely is it that a US prison is still an improvement over living in North Korea?
benttoothpaste•38m ago
I would say they are "fake" because they work using stolen identities and hide their location. In order to receive these high wages they need to pretend to be located in US and they need to provide the paperwork showing they have a right to work there.
GuestFAUniverse•58m ago
If anyone pays so much money to someone they never met, or _dependable_ know their identity, that seems like a major fail.

The whole idea that someone who couldn't legally enter the US, gets easier clearance than any tourist, or foreign academic with an opinion about the current gov that seems uncomfortable to them baffles me.

Not the first time some priorities seem out of touch with reality.

downrightmike•31m ago
BuT They"Re sO cHeAp!
askl•26m ago
> It cites information from the US Government that these IT workers can earn more than $300,000 a year

Doesn't sound that cheap.

simonbw•20m ago
The point is that there are legit American citizens who are in on the con. They have real SSNs and an actual presence in the US. They run proxy servers out of their house to make it seem like that's where their web traffic is coming from. From the company's perspective, everything seems like a regular remote employee.
alephnerd•13m ago
> The point is that there are legit American citizens who are in on the con...

For example - https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/arizona-woman-sentenced-17m-i...

ck2•58m ago
Actual atomic weapons not just stockpile, hundreds stave to death there daily, and everyone knows the famous satellite view of the entire country in darkness at night (while his palace is lit)

Yet no oil so they will be one of the longest surviving tyrannies in history

We can bet every country like them now will be building massive war drone factories too

gpm•47m ago
It's not the lack of oil that enabled this. The west* fought a bloody war to defeat North Korea. We just didn't win (though we did prevent the north from taking the south...). Now you've got a dictatorship protected by their ability to deal devastating damage to South Korea via nukes, huge stockpiles of conventional artillery (and Seoul is within range), etc. Moreover one backed by a superpower (China, and before China the soviet union... indeed these countries are the reason the west didn't win the first war as well).

They could have all the oil in the world and we'd be no more in a position to do anything about it.

*US, Uk, Australia, Netherlands, Canada, France, New Zealand, Phillipines, Tukey, Thailand, South Africa, Greece, Belgum, Luxembourg, Ethopia, Columbia, and South Korea.

AnimalMuppet•25m ago
We didn't win because China intervened in massive numbers to keep the regime in the North from losing the whole country.
FpUser•9m ago
The US did not win because the US did not win. Crying about the reasons does not help. Usual FAFO. Does not hurt to think of consequences before starting something
energy123•5m ago
South Korea wouldn't exist as a prosperous Western-aligned liberal democracy without the war, so it was hardly a complete loss.
zdw•36m ago
Seeing what China next door has done with solar and batteries, I wonder if they'll do an electric end-run around oil, similarly to some places in Africa.
epolanski•27m ago
> hundreds stave to death there daily

Yeah, you will need a solid source for that.

This isn't the 1990s, while malnutrition may happen, and there have been occasional shortages (covid was one example), it's unlikely people are starving to death in 2026, let alone multiple, let alone per day.

On top of that: North Korea is not that isolated as people think. North Koreans have smartphones and plenty of those living near the chinese border have chinese sim cards. Ever wondered why defectors say they regularly phone their family? Because virtually every north korean knows somebody with a chinese phone.

Of course flow of information outside is still tightly controlled and such, but there's zero direct evidence for starvation happening.

ck2•13m ago
what a weird argument just to argue

you really have to ignore international news for years to argue starvation in North Korea isn't real

keep BBC News on in the background each morning and you'll learn stuff never mentioned anywhere on US news

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-65881803

https://www.hrw.org/news/2021/04/12/north-koreas-leader-warn...

it's been going on for decades and yes even though 2026

abtinf•57m ago
I’m a little unclear on the usage of the word “fake” here.

Going by article, these are real people doing actual real work, they often use stolen identities to conceal information about themselves, and they get help from outside sources to do their jobs better.

Whatever the right word is, it’s not “fake”. Maybe fraudulent? Or ulterior motives? Or deceptive? Or pretext? Or threat actor? Or foreign agents?

1970-01-01•55m ago
I don't think we have a word for this. At best, it is disingenuous work.
systems•50m ago
we have many words for this Con, Fraud, Secret, Poseur, Imposter .. and after googling for more terms "Pseudonymist" seem a better fit
sam-cop-vimes•36m ago
Labeling the actual worker negatively seems harsh - they are probably being forced into it by the state. You might say they can willingly underperform and not be used this way - but if the alternative is a much harder life, could you blame them for playing along?
Bombthecat•15m ago
Spies, at the end of the day they are spies.
dayofthedaleks•47m ago
Advanced Persistent Coworker
sam-cop-vimes•37m ago
I agree - this is closer to bonded labor though the paying employer doesn't know it. Instead most of their earnings go to their actual employer (which is the North Korean state). "slave" maybe is more appropriate? "prisoner"?
calvinmorrison•9m ago
most of my earnings go to my employer too... we bill clients at X and I get a small portion of it
catigula•21m ago
The implication is that they're pretending to be legitimate employees whereas they are actually exfiltrating IP from a hostile nation state. Seems valid.
ForHackernews•12m ago
You mean like the DOGE team?
dopesoap•19m ago
It's North Korea though and they're all eViL. Imagine a world where the U.S lifted sanctions on N.K. traded with them and stopped crying about losing a war 70 years ago. Ah well a boy can dream.

Edit: Lol saying anything positive about North Korea on hacker news and people instantly freak out. This fucking website man. North Korea isn't what I would call a free society but it's also not the hell on earth that most liberals want you to think it is. So much of the misery that normal North Koreans have to face is because of western imposed sanctions. We've tried punishing them for 30 years now, it hasn't destroyed the regime if anything they double down. I guess it's easy for a bunch of overfed over paid tech workers to not feel any kind of solidarity for a North Korean though and insist on punishing them even more.

saltyoldman•19m ago
I agree that fake is an odd word to describe this. Most likely much of our IT infrastructure is extremely compromised. I wouldn't be surprised if some of the major password/healthcare/etc... leaks in the past 6 years were the result of someone "accidentally" setting a cloud bucket to public.

I actually turned down a fly-to-texas for an in person interview about a year back, but I do think in the age of the internet if we don't sacrifice some of the things we have taken for granted in the past, we're going to lose our country. Perhaps there should be a law that requires a picture of any employee standing next to their boss for continued employment - at some point in the future. (this is just an idea, not to start a flamewar, don't attack the specific idea, but attack the idea of some kind of extra checking if you don't agree with it)

FpUser•12m ago
Who cares what they're called. Main concern in this case is that the result of their work poses danger to the US. Like a spies. They often do legit work and meanwhile some "extra"
staplung•47m ago
The numbers in the headline seem odd. They imply that each (fake|fraudulent) worker only nets $5000 per year for Kim. I know the system has some inefficiencies where people behind the scenes are helping the "employee" with the work and there are cost of living expenses, taxes etc. but that seems like a pretty low take.
daemonologist•5m ago
I had the same thought - I guess there's additional overhead in paying the in-country proxy and probably also a lot of churn (being found out and fired, and then taking a long time to find another position).
film42•45m ago
Camera cuts to a tech bro at his desk with 3 jobs and 5 instances of Claude Code running:

> I had [the Register] explain to me three times what [Kim] got arrested for because it sounds an awful lot like what I do here every day.

ge96•35m ago
Camera zooms in from the bottom of the keyboard

https://youtu.be/7HWfwLBqSQ4?si=LmKuVBRVQ0y03prP&t=52

OutOfHere•26m ago
How is it that corporations can't get their act together wrt sensible hiring of remote workers? Before giving someone a final offer letter, why is it so difficult to meet them once (somewhere outside of North Korea and China)? The cost is negligible compared to a large salary.

What corporations actually do for verification also is equally damning. They ask for references, which no coworker really has an obligation to give, and it comes in the way of independent thought. Meanwhile, those from North Korea will sail through this blocker by having their fellow countrymen serve as references.

simonbw•16m ago
I mean, if the North Korean employees are doing good work, the companies employing them aren't exactly incentivized to find out that they're really North Koreans, cuz then they have an obligation to fire their actually productive employee.
mlmonkey•19m ago
A friend of mine got two such "fake" candidates for a coding interview. His experience reminded me of those "Nigerian Prince" emails from 20 years ago. These two gentlemen had western names (like "Brandon Smith") but Asian features and a tenuous grasp of spoken English; even though they claimed to have undergrad degrees from US universities. And he could tell they were looking at another screen to copy code from. After just a few minutes he realized what was going on, but continued the interview just to get the experience.
rustyhancock•4m ago
Frankly sounds like many "real" candidates I've interviewed.

The tenuous grasp of spoken English despite a degree taught in English is also not unusual.

Setting aside the fraud for a moment (which is an insurmountable barrier to employeeing them).

To some extent I'd be satisfied if they actually had a degree and were productive. They obviously need good enough receptive and written English to work.

Especially if they are earning 5k per year as the title suggests.

CyberMacGyver•18m ago
Over 5% of applicants we saw were fraudulent but we uncovered a growing pattern of candidates manipulating resumes to perfectly match job descriptions, making them very likely to be interviewed. So we actually built a solution for this (SOTAIntel.io).

Here’s an interview with one of pretending to be a “Licensed Architect” https://youtu.be/1FrN0dstQ68

jasonvorhe•5m ago
I'm so tired of this intellectually dishonest phrasing of making everything about "controversial" individuals whenever they're perceived as being the current villain, whether that's Putin, Elon, Kim or whatever.

Just terrible writing.