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How Long Until AI Doesn't Need Humans?

https://asteriskmag.com/issues/14/how-long-until-ai-doesn-t-need-humans
1•littlexsparkee•1m ago•0 comments

Verification Theater in AI Agent Work

https://www.agentverificationtheater.com
2•SAMI_SERRAG•4m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Tamper-evident audit trail for AI coding agent activity

https://github.com/Constellation-Labs/gate-oc-audit
1•gclaramunt•6m ago•0 comments

Feds freaked over Fable 5 after simple 'fix this code' prompt, not jailbreak

https://www.theregister.com/security/2026/06/15/feds-freaked-over-fable-5-after-simple-fix-this-c...
1•Filligree•6m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: How much better has Fable been at design, really?

1•thatxliner•11m ago•0 comments

Open Sourcing Python Examples for an MCP Messaging Interface

https://blog.bridgexapi.io/open-sourcing-ai-native-messaging-execution
2•Bridgexapi•12m ago•0 comments

QUBE 340/ Q300L

https://www.coolermaster.com/en-global/products/qube-430%2Fq300l.html
1•ilreb•15m ago•0 comments

Ben Forta - The UK's Social Media Ban: Necessary, and Bound to Fail

https://forta.com/blog/the-uks-social-media-ban-necessary-and-bound-to-fail
1•rmason•18m ago•0 comments

A new frontier in generative genomics with Omnii

https://www.radicalnumerics.ai/blog/omnii-health-preview
2•lebovic•21m ago•0 comments

Looking for a front end dev to help me build a math website

2•marysminefnuf•21m ago•0 comments

Banned Book Library in a Wi-Fi Smart Light Bulb

https://www.richardosgood.com/posts/banned-book-library/
13•sohkamyung•29m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Subagent-fleet – AI coding subagents across local Ollama machines

https://pypi.org/project/subagent-fleet/
1•akarnam37•29m ago•0 comments

67% of AI-generated commands are unsafe. We tested it

https://www.golproductions.com/blog/we-tested-gemini-ai-agent-67-percent-commands-were-unsafe
1•golproductions•30m ago•0 comments

American Express: Cell-Based Architecture for Resilient Payment Systems

https://americanexpress.io/cell-based-architecture-for-resilient-payment-systems/
4•birdculture•30m ago•0 comments

The efficiency-gain illusion: People underestimate the rate of AI use

https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.22687
2•Anon84•31m ago•0 comments

Build Compliant AI Agents with Stateful Stream Processing

https://www.confluent.io/blog/compliant-ai-agents-stateful-stream-processing/
1•manveerc•33m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Fish anything – a chill game using small models

https://build-small-hackathon-llm-fishing.hf.space
1•reuzed•34m ago•0 comments

Prediction and Entropy of Printed English - Claude Shannon (1950) [pdf]

https://www.princeton.edu/~wbialek/rome/refs/shannon_51.pdf
2•consumer451•34m ago•0 comments

The Official Akismet PHP SDK

https://akismet.com/blog/introducing-the-official-akismet-php-sdk/
3•gslin•41m ago•0 comments

Swedish parliament abolishes permanent residence visas for migrants

https://www.riksdagen.se/en/news/articles/2026/jun/9/permanent-residence-permits-to-be-abolished_...
29•CGMthrowaway•43m ago•39 comments

When Did White-Collar Work Start to Look So Bleak?

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2026/06/22/mutiny-noam-scheiber-book-review-yuppies-dylan-gott...
4•littlexsparkee•43m ago•3 comments

Andy McLean: Rapidus MoU Boosts U.K. Access to 2-Nm Tech- EE Times

https://www.eetimes.com/andy-mclean-rapidus-mou-will-help-british-innovators-access-2-nm-technology/
2•rbanffy•47m ago•0 comments

Meta Employees Hate Zuckerberg's Plan for a Companywide AI Hackathon

https://www.wired.com/story/meta-employees-absolutely-hate-mark-zuckerbergs-hackathon-idea/
8•cdrnsf•51m ago•2 comments

Ask HN: Why did you open source your project?

4•david_shi•51m ago•1 comments

Micro Radar: a tiny open-source flight radar for your desk

https://github.com/AnthonySturdy/micro-radar
4•asturdy•53m ago•1 comments

You Can't Have Both Democracy and Billionaires

https://www.currentaffairs.org/news/you-cant-have-both-democracy-and-billionaires
20•jacquesm•55m ago•2 comments

Justice Department Decision to Allow Paramount Deal Surprised Investigators

https://www.wsj.com/business/media/justice-department-decision-to-allow-paramount-deal-surprised-...
2•JumpCrisscross•56m ago•0 comments

Qualcomm in Talks to Purchase Tenstorrent

https://www.reuters.com/technology/qualcomm-talks-buy-tenstorrent-information-reports-2026-06-15/
4•milleramp•58m ago•0 comments

Openfootmanager: Open-source football management simulation game

https://github.com/openfootmanager/openfootmanager
2•nateb2022•59m ago•0 comments

Show HN: AltiVerse: What If SIM, see different decisions affect an environment

https://github.com/LeoTheAIDev/Altiverse
4•leoTheCoderrr•1h ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

The Dead Economy Theory

https://gmalandrakis.com/writings/ad-economicum.html
32•l0new0lf-G•1h ago

Comments

vintagedave•1h ago
This seems the kind of (scarily true) thing I’d expect Charles Stross to write about.
skybrian•58m ago
Suppose we modeled this as two separate countries:

* AI Island: just runs AI in data centers.

* Elsewhere: same as now.

Wouldn't there be gains from trade?

Sure, AI Island might be able to provide lots of cheap Internet services, but you can't eat Internet. Wouldn't they want something in exchange?

And wouldn't there still be lots of jobs in Elsewhere that can't be done over the Internet and have nothing to do with AI Island? If AI Island charges too much, they can always trade among themselves.

monknomo•48m ago
I think this mentions that AI Island also has robots than can produce most goods
skybrian•44m ago
I don't see why we should take that scenario seriously.

In part because agriculture is already heavily mechanized and many factories already have lots of robots. How much would access to an LLM improve the robots?

throwway120385•27m ago
Assuming a good enough LLM, you can say something like "Please find me a site with optimum growing conditions for beetroot in the next year and arrange to have the field planted and maintained until the harvest season for beetroot is over" and then just let 'er rip.

What's crazy about that is it's essentially post-scarcity if we want it to be. Or what's most likely to happen is that in the US we'll all be sucking down water laced with contraceptives in terrafoam while our corporate masters wait for us to die off so they can inherit all of the land.

groos•50m ago
All of this will be very entertaining reading for the billionaires when they're against the wall.
2001zhaozhao•47m ago
Inb4 the economy is just a paperclip maximizer, a hedonium maximizer, and 5 different AGIs built to maximally enrich their creators all trading with each other.
jzig•45m ago
You just described the plot of Alien: Earth!
moomoo11•31m ago
lol or my favorite theory: I wake up and it is 1994. I am 3 years old, outside with my grandpa <3

well, shit. here we go again.

like, what even is consciousness and all that :s sorry, just thought i'd share lol

Quinner•43m ago
For an article that starts off asking us to examine our assumptions and not make leaps of logic, it goes on to make some absolute whopper assumptions, like that governments (Western governments especially, for some reason), won't do anything to address the problems the article is raising, that they'll instead abandon democracy entirely and resort to police and military oppression, and that massive unemployment and poverty of almost all people is something you could even keep a lid on with policing.
hurtigioll•13m ago
I guess you don't know about North Korea
throw391912321•40m ago
I've seen this idea float around r/singularity and r/collapse for years and it's probably responsible for a horrifying amount of suicides at this point.

It's not even that good of an argument. It makes some incredibly flimsy assumptions; reddit marxist priors of labor oppression being an inescapable invariant across all of human history, ultra-compliant superintelligences, a perfectly unitary elite without any desire to defect, all other societal variables staying the same somehow, etc.. It only exists because of upvote algorithms amplifying emotional action-suppressing doomer content. Really not that different from other hostile memes like QAnon.

I would really like if people stopped spreading this anti-agency garbage and actually made an effort to advocate for policy. It's something I have to give Luke Drago some points for, he actually cares about the problem rather than just saying the inevitable eternal stratification hypersuffering anti-singularity is inevitable and implying that death is preferable.

smallmancontrov•34m ago
All workable policy paths involve taxing capital and you're gonna call that Marxist even though it isn't, so we're at an impasse.
stevenwoo•24m ago
Using Marxist as a denunciation feels like a shibboleth considering how often it comes out of the mouths of conservative politicians in the USA when talking about stuff that is not remotely related to it.
smallmancontrov•11m ago
Yep, exactly. The USA is in the fortunate position of having a solid historical example of how to re-balance an economy that let inequality cook out of control: FDR. We didn't have a far-right Hitler or a far-left Stalin because we had a Roosevelt. We should aim for that again -- but at the moment I'm afraid our aim is drifting to the right, a right that calls its own policy position from 6 months prior "radical Marxist lunacy" and will certainly do the same to any compromise struck in that historically informed center.
andrewmutz•36m ago
If you want to understand the likely capabilities of AI technology in the future, listen to software engineers like this guy.

If you want to understand the impact of AI technology on the economy, don't listen to software engineers, listen to economists.

david_shi•35m ago
"The growth of the Internet will slow drastically, as the flaw in 'Metcalfe's law'–which states that the number of potential connections in a network is proportional to the square of the number of participants–becomes apparent: most people have nothing to say to each other! By 2005 or so, it will become clear that the Internet's impact on the economy has been no greater than the fax machine's."
hurtigioll•31m ago
Taleb joke:

junior trader for a bank looses $10 mil. boss asks him what happened. trader says he sold oil because bank economist said oil price will go down. boss fires him. junior asks how could he become a good trader if he's fired on the first losing trade. boss says "no, you idiot, I didn't fire you because you made a losing trade, I fired you because you listened to our economist"

smallmancontrov•8m ago
Just remember that the US purged left-leaning economists during the cold war and the field re-grew under intense think-tank incentives towards the economic right, so if you think labor/capital dynamics might be important to the AI revolution you really ought to balance your "random" sampling of US economists with some Piketty (Atkinson, Stiglitz, Zucman -- but in an era where reading even one book is considered a herculean feat of focus, "Capital in the Twenty First Century" by Piketty is the canonical pick).
dismalaf•33m ago
There's a lot of bad economics and assumptions here even if the conclusion is plausible.

Yes, an economy of robots harvesting things to serve a few masters (or they takeover themselves Terminator-style) is possible and perhaps the end game.

Thompsonflimsy•32m ago
This whole post rests on a basic misunderstanding of economics.
dlev_pika•25m ago
Which is?
moomoo11•24m ago
found the economist (just kidding)
reasonableklout•29m ago
See also https://www.owenmcgrann.com/p/the-dead-economy-theory which was thoroughly discussed 17 days ago at https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48324712 (1426 comments).
sdevonoes•28m ago
Isn’t it clear that the “enemy” of 99% of the people in the world (and in HN) are the ultra rich? Therefore we shouldn’t use Claude/Gemini/OpenAI?

It’s not about stopping progress, rather stopping the ultra rich getting richer and more powerful over our lives. Whether we can use claude to automate a fucking script or service is meaningless compared to that.

The dream of elon musk et al is to keep accumulating power and have non-humans serve them. They don’t want us, and as soon as they can they will replace us. But here we are giving them more power. Ridiculous

confidantlake•17m ago
Damn downvoted to oblivion 3 minutes after you posted this. The bots are out in force on this one.
sp527•27m ago
This author's writing style is too obnoxious for me to have gotten all the way through it, but the important thing is that he's wrong.

Every single economic transaction ultimately connects to people generating demand. EVERY single one. All B2B transactions included.

Sometimes this can appear to not be the case if there's a significant lag time between initial B2B transactions and some end consumer demand. That lag is bridged by hopeful investors and creditors.

The present AI buildout is an example of this. And it is not immune from the principle. There will ultimately need to be real people generating real demand somewhere in the economy in order to justify an economic return on the massive outlay.

Government expenditures are also included. Tax dollars used to pay for things are ultimately satisfying demand generated by citizens. Even, believe it or not, a deranged government blowing up random people in the Middle East. That still traces to the (perceived) security needs of some population.

The aggregate demand equation is as follows:

AD = C + I + G + NX

C = Consumer Spending I = Investment G = Government Spending NX = Net Exports

What's going to happen in the future is that demand will have to shift in this equation. Remember that Investment needs to be justified by some demand created elsewhere — it is in essence the purchase of an IOU predicated on future demand that must ultimately trace down to real people. We are all broadly in agreement that Consumption will contract, as labor is progressively disempowered and capital continues to concentrate. Let's ignore NX.

The answer is that the sources of demand in the future will likely shift to, primarily, (1) demand still generated by wealthy people consuming things (e.g. mansions, yachts, rockets, ego-affirming Mars colonies) and (2) government spending that serves entire populations.

This all assumes, of course, that we continue with the present economic model, in spite of the immense human suffering and turmoil that is likely on the horizon, as we transition into a fundamentally different technological age.

hurtigioll•10m ago
we do not trade with animals, for they have nothing to offer.

AIs will not trade with us, for we have nothing to offer.

sp527
atleastoptimal•24m ago
Many people don't realize that the human-legible economy is not the end goal to the fate of wealth and productivity in the known universe.

The economy is human-serving and human-legible because humans are a universal bottleneck to productivity and wealth creation. Once humans are no longer this bottleneck, the economy will begin to serve other interests, as those other interests will be the source of far more productivity than humans (i.e. AI agents, robots, etc)

If people understood this they'd understand that the "permanent underclass" notion is farcical: Human capital will not be allowed to be what allows productivity to commence or halt in a future that is 1000x more efficient and fast-moving due to AI. Any AI smart enough to do such will not wait on humans to give them permission with their money.

bediger4000•16m ago
Once the owning class owns mostly everything and* has intelligent machines that serve them, The Economy crashing will not have real consequences for them. It barely has real consequences for them already -as they have consistently ended up richer after the dot com bubble, the 2008 recession, and the covid recession.*

The coming out richer part is undeniably true, but I have doubts about the conclusion, which is something like "after oligarchs own everything, they don't need many people". Look, even the old Bell System required participation of about a third of the US population.

Oligarchs might be able to have young, fit concubines, and loyal, retainers with steel thews if there's a population of less than a third of today, but they'll have trouble maintaining their health because there will be fewer doctors and no specialists. Telegram communications might be possible, but who's going to maintain gigawatts of data centers for such a population? I'm pretty sure "AI" will slip away in such a world, but who needs waifus when real harems can exist?

kingstnap•14m ago
What AI really seems to be posed to do is make labour a lot less valuable and capital a lot more valuable.

Running a government requires a lot of cash flow. I think its sort of inevitable that it's going to need to start coming mostly from the later and not the former.

jplusequalt•17m ago
>reddit marxist priors of labor oppression being an inescapable invariant across all of human history

Not that I agree with all of Marx's ideas, but I think this is one of his less controversial ideas. There has always been a class struggle between business owners and workers, and there probably always will be.

>anti-agency garbage and actually made an effort to advocate for policy

An increasing amount of US citizens have little to no trust in our government to actually come up with a viable solution that helps the people in a world where AI automation is happening across multiple sectors at once.

You want to address the paranoia people feel? You have to also address that lack of trust in our government. That's a tall order.

confidantlake•9m ago
It isn't inevitable but it is where we are heading. We are basically in the early 1930s. Even fighting against it and winning is going to be extremely ugly. And that is the most optimistic scenario.
•
8m ago
AIs are not conscious and do not have real needs that are detached from a real person. That can certainly be simulated, but I would hope that we can collectively agree to unplug them should that situation arise.