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Sony Music vs. Udio [pdf]

https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.nysd.623701/gov.uscourts.nysd.623701.156.0.pdf
1•ChrisArchitect•22s ago•0 comments

Mirax Trojan, spreads via Meta ads, infected 220k users so far

https://securityaffairs.com/190842/uncategorized/mirax-malware-campaign-hits-220k-accounts-enable...
1•lschueller•30s ago•0 comments

LIV Golf Facing Imminent Closure as Saudi Backers Weigh Pulling Funding

https://www.wsj.com/sports/golf/liv-golf-saudi-funding-e7c19130
2•JumpCrisscross•5m ago•0 comments

A One Word Meta Compiler (1994)

https://www.ultratechnology.com/meta2.html
2•mjdiloreto•9m ago•0 comments

AllBirds (the one that sells shoes) Goes All in on AI

https://12gramsofcarbon.com/p/tech-things-allbirds-goes-all-in
2•theahura•10m ago•1 comments

Show HN: A magic eraser that runs a 208MB ONNX model in the browser

https://www.allplix.com/en/magic-eraser
1•shadoxise•11m ago•0 comments

"How I built on-device-only architecture for Mac utilities (and why it matters)"

https://saneapps.com
1•SaneApps•12m ago•1 comments

Show HN: US keyboards don't have enough keys, so I switched to Japanese

https://simone.org/hyperjis/
1•smnrg•13m ago•0 comments

NIST narrows scope of CVE to keep up with rising tide of vulnerabilities

https://cyberscoop.com/nist-narrows-cve-analysis-nvd/
1•lschueller•17m ago•0 comments

When GPUs Fail Quietly: Observability-Aware Early Warning Beyond Telemetry

https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.28781
1•matt_d•19m ago•0 comments

Federated, End-to-End Encrypted Document Storage with Git

https://blog.foks.pub/posts/federated-e2e-encrypted-doc-storage-with-git/
1•maxtaco•19m ago•0 comments

Does Gas Town 'steal' usage from users' LLM credits to improve itself?

https://github.com/gastownhall/gastown/issues/3649
22•rektomatic•20m ago•5 comments

So, you want to be a darknet drug lord

https://pastebin.com/raw/GrV3uYh5
4•pRusya•21m ago•2 comments

Firefox appears to be bulk removing extensions with no explanation

https://discourse.mozilla.org/t/add-on-removed-without-explanation/147949
5•newswangerd•22m ago•1 comments

The Mythical Agent-Month

https://wesmckinney.com/blog/mythical-agent-month/
1•tchalla•24m ago•0 comments

Ticketmaster and Live Nation found Guilty of anticompetitive venue monopoly

https://apnews.com/article/live-nation-ticketmaster-antitrust-trial-f0ffdd20dd4f64e8b4bb9d97134b826f
2•randycupertino•24m ago•3 comments

V&A Museum deletes maps and images deemed sensitive by Beijing from publications

https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2026/apr/14/v-and-a-censored-catalogues-demands-chinese-printer
1•ilamont•24m ago•0 comments

US and Israel's war on Iran is a disaster for the environment, analysis shows

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/mar/21/middle-east-iran-conflict-environment-climate
2•PaulHoule•25m ago•0 comments

Trace: Capability-Targeted Agentic Training

https://scalingintelligence.stanford.edu/blogs/trace/
1•mbeissinger•25m ago•0 comments

DeepBlue Marine Unlocks Africa's Coastal Economy Through Premium Experience

https://deep-blue-marine-5f14a6b1.base44.app
1•DeepBlue_Marine•25m ago•0 comments

Jury finds Live Nation, Ticketmaster had anti-competitive monopoly

https://www.cbc.ca/lite/story/9.7164989
2•colinprince•26m ago•1 comments

Great Docs: Beautiful Documentation for Python Packages

https://opensource.posit.co/blog/2026-04-15_introduction/
1•dbaupp•26m ago•0 comments

Graphene just defied a fundamental law of physics

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/04/260415042152.htm
2•HardwareLust•27m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Originary – emit signed records for MCP tools

https://github.com/peacprotocol/peac
1•jithinraj•27m ago•0 comments

Retrofitting JIT compilers into C interpreters with ykllvm

https://tratt.net/laurie/blog/2026/retrofitting_jit_compilers_into_c_interpreters.html
1•fanf2•28m ago•0 comments

Cloudflare Browser Run. Will it go around Cloudflare's own blocking?

https://blog.cloudflare.com/browser-run-for-ai-agents/
2•touwer•29m ago•0 comments

Meta-Harness: automated search over task-specific model harnesses

https://github.com/stanford-iris-lab/meta-harness
1•mbeissinger•30m ago•0 comments

Hacker News Daily podcast, created with vibecasting

https://vibecasting.fm/vibecasts
3•ryanj20021•30m ago•1 comments

Wq_affn_cache_shard Merged for Linux 7.1 Significant Win for CPUs Many Cores

https://www.phoronix.com/news/Linux-7.1-WQ
1•Bender•30m ago•0 comments

Trump's push to cut interest rates has echoes of 'banana republic', says Yellen

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2026/apr/15/donald-trump-cut-interest-rates-janet-yellen-us-...
8•mitchbob•31m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Why are Flock employees watching our children?

https://substack.com/home/post/p-193593234
136•enaaem•1h ago

Comments

enaaem•1h ago
From the article:

Bob also has some interesting searches. On September 30th, 2025 - Bob looked at just one camera. This camera is in the gymnastics room of the JCC. I personally am curious about why a sales employee from Flock would be viewing the gymnastics room. I think this also deserves an explanation.

expedition32•1h ago
Sounds like Bob should run for president.
lynndotpy•20m ago
I think it's worth speaking plainly and specifically about this.

The implied and speculated motivation is that Bob, and the other Flock employees watching people without their consent, is voyeurism. That means to look at people in otherwise-private places and in various states of undress, for sexual gratification. It is not uncommon for someone who believes nobody is looking to even adjust their clothes on their body, briefly exposing genitals, nipples, etc.

This is very concerning, but even more so because this includes children.

Bender•1h ago
Why is there a flock camera indoors at a school in the first place? Are the schools supposed to be putting video and audio footage of children on 3rd party storage platforms? Are the parents aware of this? Perhaps PTA meetings should discuss. That seems like something that should be using close circuit PoE cameras to local NVR's with on-prem encrypted storage with a retention policy if there must be cameras. Encrypted CEPH perhaps? [3]

Just as one example Zoneminder [1][2] can be clustered and distributed assuming a large campus. I'm sure there must be other open source NVR's that can do the same. School IT staff should try out a small deployment first and then extend it year over year. Local AI should detect and alert on fights, abuse from teachers, anyone with a weapon, someone injured, etc...

Bob can be granted access to specific cameras that relate to his role to avoid Repetitive Strain Injury RSI among other issues.

[1] - https://zoneminder.readthedocs.io/en/stable/

[2] - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Us20t1gQPOE [video][48 mins][tutorial using LXC on Debian and Proxmox]

[3] - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xzLV9Agnou8 [video][24 mins][ceph tutorial on proxmox][cat included]

cyanydeez•36m ago
Most likely, it's part of not dealing directly with access to guns, and associated Police state and chillun-to-prison pipeline.

This seems to just be a regular progression, and offering some open source alternative to oppression is amusing.

kube-system•31m ago
The main reason that organizations choose commercially managed solutions is because they don't have local expertise or staff to do things themselves. I do agree that on-prem solutions are better, but Zoneminder is probably not a great option. Besides being old and clunky, it also isn't anywhere near a complete solution, and the IP cameras people often choose to connect to them are often security nightmares. There are many good and complete commercial offerings that are secure and keep video locally.
Bender•22m ago
I totally get what you are saying and there are certainly some schools that lack IT staff, budget and experience but there are some schools that have big budgets and plenty of IT people sitting on their hands that could slowly build this out, document it in a way that schools could budget around YoY and set examples for other schools. Maybe even use it as a project to get students some college credits.

If there are better options than Zoneminder please do share the tutorial videos with others here so they have greater options. I am old and clunky so ZM works for me. There are probably some school IT admins reading this. ZM has great documentation and tutorial videos in my opinion. It is also used by a large number of corporations.

Just my own philosophy but I am leery of expensive turn-key commercial solutions as they lead to proprietary solutions that school IT won't understand and will just lead to dead cameras and empty NVR's when law enforcement need them the most. It will be one of the first maintenance contracts that get cut from budgets.

EvanAnderson•21m ago
Commercially managed doesn't have to mean off-prem. There are vendors local to me who deploy turnkey on-prem video surveillance systems without remote management, if the Customer would prefer not to have it. (It means increased service call costs.) The school district I contract with had one installed last year. (I don't love the Motorola Avigilon software but the cameras were fairly nice. The vendor needed extensive management to make sure things ended up in the right place in the network, LDAP integration for the system worked, etc).

Agree re: Zoneminder being a bad choice today. I hear good stuff about Frigate[0] but I haven't had time to try it yet. Outside of the FLOSS space Milestone XProtect isn't awful.

[0] https://frigate.video/

tclancy•17m ago
> Are the parents aware of this? Perhaps PTA meetings should discuss.

Not everyone grows up in such an idyllic environment where there is an active and engaged PTA or concerned parents who feel like they have a voice. Moreover the perceived need for security cameras is probably inversely proportional to places with active PTA groups (though maybe not). Either way, suggesting tech solutions is rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic.

josefritzishere•52m ago
Flock is so wantonly irresponsible. Their security focus is borderline non-existent. This sector desperately needs to be regulated.
bpt3•48m ago
By whom? The regulators are the ones signing up for these services.
superfrank•37m ago
The FBI. This sounds like a CJIS violation
tclancy•16m ago
Buddy, I have some awful news. On the plus side, you can email the FBI director at his personal email to try to get him on the case.
superfrank•37m ago
The sector is heavily regulated. I worked at a company in the same space as Flock a few years ago and production access was restricted to only those who needed it when they needed it (automated system that would give access for a defined period of time and then revoke it). It also required getting CJIS certified which was a massive pain in the ass and required things like being finger printed and sending forms to every individual state.

If Flock is just giving everyone in their company access to production data it's not that the sector needs ,more regulation, it's that someone need to audit Flock for compliance.

fakedang•36m ago
> Flock is so wantonly irresponsible. Their security focus is borderline non-existent. This sector desperately needs to be regulated.

Like literally every other YC company lol.

john_strinlai•46m ago
just when you thought it was bad, it gets worse.

why do sales employees have access (or ability to request access) to camera feeds at all?

i would like to know what other cameras adam snow, bob carter, cameran whiteman view regularly. "search him hard drive" as the kids say.

(p.s. https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/flock-safety, sadly the "latest news" section does not have "flock sales employees caught watching kids", just hundreds of millions in funding to realize the minority report)

tclancy•17m ago
How else would they sell to additional customers if they couldn't demo random video feeds from all over?
john_strinlai•16m ago
perhaps by setting up a dedicated "demo feed”, rather than access the cameras of live customers, like every other product that i have sat through a demo for

can you imagine sales force or dynamics poking around some random company's live data during a demo to some other company?

therobots927•45m ago
It may take time but make no mistake - this will become a bigger issue than it currently is. The fact that multiple high level Flock employees appear to be spying on children in highly suspect settings (gym, pool) is a massive, massive scandal. This just gave everyone at their city council meetings some of the most potent talking points to use against city adoption of Flock cameras.

This is just the beginning.

anigbrowl•39m ago
Also public employees.

Although there are many trends of Dunwoody PD officers and staff monitoring the live view cameras on the JCC’s fitness studios, gyms, and pools [...]

I doubt this aligns with any guidelines on effective crime prevention.

bhandziuk•34m ago
As someone who has been somewhat involved with this I'm disappointed and but not terribly surprised this goes even deeper than Dunwoody public spaces. There was a lot of community engagement on the Flock contract renewal but the vote was postponed twice. It seemed like once community engagement died down (because asking people to stay vigilant constantly is exhausting). Council seemed upset but when it came down to it they voted unanimously to continue and expand the Flock contract.

I feel like it really does a lot of harm to public trust. But also most people, even people pretty engaged in the community, just don't know or care about the consequences of being surveilled constantly. It's very hard to convey to them the potential harm this is doing to them or their kids.

Geee•26m ago
My guess is that this is part of a demo or onboarding for new customers, and they're using their cameras for this.
rcoveson•23m ago
I'm happy to say that I would be fired if I did this, thought this, or wrote this comment.

EDIT: Parent used to say "it's common for salespeople to log in to customer environments to show potential customers what the product looks like with actual data in it."

pavel_lishin•18m ago
You would be fired if you had a thought?
rcoveson•13m ago
If I had the thought, in general, that this was a fine thing to do, then yes. Presumably I would do it or permit somebody else to do it and be fired.
john_strinlai•20m ago
"interested in entering a contract with flock? great! let me show you some kids in the pool, so you can see how high quality our cameras are.

oh, pools aren't your thing? how about some kids doing gymnastics, perhaps?"

JohnMakin•24m ago
Not super surprising an employee comfortable with what Flock does, to not bear any moral burden from profiting off of it, would have a few creeps in the mix.
hed•13m ago
The council meeting alluded to in the article happened a few days ago and is on YouTube[1]. Public comment starts around 23m, the commenters bring up some of the things in the article, and the council still moves to approve around 1h20m.

[1] - https://youtu.be/AqOYDNKBr3g?si=EFOTKlKIRK01mVvL