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Show HN: Foundry: a Markdown-first CMS written in Go

https://github.com/sphireinc/Foundry
1•nsayoda•3m ago•0 comments

Jaybird 6.0.5 Released

https://firebirdsql.org/en/news/jaybird-6-0-5-and-jaybird-5-0-12-released
1•mariuz•3m ago•0 comments

Speculative Decoding: Performance or Illusion?

https://specdecode-bench.github.io/
1•matt_d•4m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Mercury Bank closed account due to residency – alternatives?

1•salleisha•4m ago•0 comments

LLM Persuasion Benchmark: Multi-Turn Persuasion Between Models

https://github.com/lechmazur/persuasion
4•zone411•6m ago•0 comments

Confinia – a supervised market research runtime for live trading systems

https://github.com/bamhann/confinia
1•bamhann•6m ago•0 comments

Scaling Laws: Should AI Laws Be Subject to a Higher Standard? [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sx7FdK6ufPg
1•verdverm•6m ago•0 comments

Katpack.ai – a pack of AI agents that argue, vote, and sign before any trade

https://katpack.ai
2•claydronze•7m ago•0 comments

AI contract review for people afraid to sign

https://equaldocs.com
3•nmei•9m ago•2 comments

Why Software Engineering Will Never Die Revisited in the Age of Spec Driven Dev

https://www.i-programmer.info/professional-programmer/103-i-programmer/18759-why-software-enginee...
3•aquastorm•10m ago•1 comments

Cache Energy's Thermal Battery

https://www.wsj.com/business/energy-oil/thermal-battery-cache-energy-cement-799295ca
2•connoronthejob•10m ago•0 comments

How Apple became Apple: The definitive oral history of company's earliest days

https://www.fastcompany.com/91514404/apple-founding-50th-anniversary-apple-1-apple-ii-jobs-wozniak
2•CharlesW•10m ago•0 comments

Myelin – Procedural memory for AI agents

https://myelin.vercel.app
2•maksyyy•11m ago•0 comments

The first deterministic RAG system (same query = same results, every time)

https://saiql.ai/Atlas_LRAG-CE/
2•apolloraines•11m ago•1 comments

Browser-based SFX synthesizer using WASM/Zig

https://knell.medieval.software/studio
2•galsjel•12m ago•1 comments

Frenzy – Real-time prediction market where every trade resolves in 5 seconds

https://frenzy.finance
2•tinfoilcat•13m ago•1 comments

Structure and mechanistic basis of NrdR, a bacterial master regulator

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0141813026005738
2•PaulHoule•14m ago•0 comments

The Kleene Star

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kleene_star
2•dhorthy•15m ago•0 comments

A SECOND Sphinx detected in Egypt as scans hint at 'underground megastructure'

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-15681329/second-sphinx-egypt-giza-plateau.html
2•Brajeshwar•16m ago•0 comments

Anthropic's context-window.md is 18,501 tokens. 551 are content. I have notes

https://claylo.dev/articles/markdown-cosplay/
3•claylo•16m ago•1 comments

MCP Subagents

https://cameronwestland.com/mcp-subagents/
3•camwest•16m ago•1 comments

Amazon Dies: A Possible, Maybe Likely Future

https://markatwood.substack.com/p/how-amazon-dies-a-possible-maybe
2•greedo•19m ago•0 comments

Common Questions Asked in Investor Pitches

https://kailaos.com/blog/most-common-questions-in-investor-pitches
2•babaliauskas•19m ago•0 comments

Gail.com

https://gail.com
2•HughParry•21m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Cranki – Crosswords meet Anki flashcards

https://cranki.app
2•petargyurov•22m ago•0 comments

Exposing a Global 'Rape Academy'

https://www.cnn.com/interactive/2026/03/world/expose-rape-assault-online-vis-intl/index.html
2•embedding-shape•22m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Notme.bot – an OSS specification to remove bearer tokens in an AI world

https://notme.bot
2•notreallymetho•23m ago•0 comments

How I accidentally made the fastest C# CSV parser

https://bepis.io/blog/turbo-csv-parser/
2•bigbillwilson•23m ago•0 comments

FBI director Kash Patel's personal email breached by Iran-linked hackers

https://indianexpress.com/article/world/us-news/fbi-director-kash-patels-personal-inbox-breached-...
5•alwillis•23m ago•0 comments

AI Is Having Its HTML Moment

https://teamcal.ai/blog/ai-is-having-its-html-moment
2•rajl•24m ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

SimpleX Chat

https://simplex.chat/
21•Cider9986•1h ago

Comments

john_strinlai•58m ago
>World's Most Secure Messaging

immediate eye roll. marketing thinks it is doing a favor here, but for anyone who really cares, this is just produces sighs.

https://simplex.chat/security/ at least has Trail of Bits audits from 2022 & 2024. but then they say "We are planning implementation security assessment in early 2025." which is not linked, so it is unclear if it was never done or the security page has not been updated in a year.

either case is bad.

>To hide your IP address from the servers, you can connect to SimpleX servers via Tor.

thats one hell of a caveat to sneak into the last sentence of a "learn more" popup

>"SimpleX has no identifiers assigned to the users -- not even random numbers"

which is later revealed to be pairwise pseudonymous identifiers. oh, and apparently your ip address, unless you use tor.

thisisauserid•55m ago
I heard that Simplex-2 will go even more viral.
uniq7•55m ago
It is a red flag that in the "SimpleX Roadmap to Free Internet" section they refer to 2024 as "Now" and they explain their expansion plans for 2025 as something in the future. It is weird that this is in the home page of their official web site.
jayd16•50m ago
Can you chat in both directions or is simplex uni-directional?
ranger_danger•11m ago
How does one have a unidirectional chat?
embedding-shape•38m ago
> World's Most Secure Messaging

Very strong claim, and the link takes you to https://simplex.chat/messaging/ which again has a lot of strong claims, but where is the evidence of this? Where is the evidence of this being "more secure" (for who? For what threats?) than say Signal or even Telegram or Whatsapp? Signal themselves provide evidence of their claims, where are SimpleX providing their evidence?

rickcarlino•37m ago
I’ve been using SimpleX for a small circle of friends and it has been pretty easy to use. I am surprised it has not seen wider adoption. Writing scripts for it is also straightforward.
lxgr•27m ago
I tried to figure out its identity model and failed, and I consider myself somewhat familiar with encrypted IM protocols. How should non-technical users ever figure this out?

And if they don't need to, and it just works as a regular encrypted messenger: Why should somebody use this over any of the many alternatives?

Other than that, its "advantages" page looks highly disingenuous, e.g. by describing Signal as "Possibility of MITM: Yes", but itself as "No - Secure", with a footnote of "Verify security code to mitigate attack on out-of-band channel". How is that different from verifying a Signal verification code!?

ranger_danger•6m ago
> Why should somebody use this over any of the many alternatives?

- no phone number

- no account

- p2p via onion routing and public relay servers

- public and private file sharing systems via XFTP

jryio•26m ago
It's exhausting to make this comment every time... but here we go.

Key revocation is table stakes for secure messaging. I need a trusted way to relay that my contact's key has been revoked and I should stop trusting it.

Neither P2P, TLS, client-server, or any choice of key curve gives you this. Read the whitepaper, no mention of revocation. Correct me if I missed something.

lxgr•19m ago
I feel like key revocation is usually solved via key replacement in most secure instant messengers.

Every implementation that I know (which does not include SimpleX) offers some way to recover from complete key loss, at which point other parties receive a "the key for this contact has changed" notification, and that new key is then untrusted by default until verified out-of-band. (This does trust the server operators to not censor your re-registration, but that seems no different from most other centralized revocation mechanisms.)

Do you have a scenario in mind where this would not be sufficient?

ranger_danger•13m ago
Can't this be accomplished with a CRL for client-side certificates?