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Show HN: Import the HN Home to a reading queue with clean reader view and TL;DR

https://readplace.com/import?mode=from-url
2•fagnerbrack•3m ago•1 comments

Reimagining Systems Thinking as Cybersystemic Researching

https://stream.syscoi.com/2025/12/01/reimagining-systems-thinking-as-cybersystemic-researching-an...
2•andsoitis•4m ago•0 comments

Grok 4.5, based on our 1.5T V9 foundation model, with Cursor data added in su

https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/2071184354756477041
3•cyrc•7m ago•0 comments

The shift from browsing to commanding: Autonomous web agents in action

https://www.fognitix.com/
2•fognitix•8m ago•1 comments

Five Months in Munich: Revisiting 1991 Without Erasing Decades That Scaled It

https://akmaier.substack.com/p/five-months-in-munich-revisiting
2•felixbraun•9m ago•0 comments

Was Ozempic discovered thanks to "silly" research?

https://www.oscillator.blog/p/was-ozempic-discovered-thanks-to
3•salonium_•9m ago•0 comments

The vibration of the pager has a sound all its own

https://www.notyouremergency.com/triage-intro
2•mooreds•9m ago•0 comments

32BJ Health Fund and Northwell Direct announce direct health care contract

https://www.northwell.edu/news/the-latest/northwell-direct-32bj-largest-direct-health-care-contra...
2•mooreds•9m ago•0 comments

How should founders choose the right tech stack for a startup website?

https://moonsofts.net/
2•MoonSofts•10m ago•0 comments

America's largest companies have no simple way to report security flaws

https://this.weekinsecurity.com/dozens-of-americas-largest-companies-have-no-simple-way-to-report...
2•mooreds•11m ago•0 comments

Installing SerenityOS on My Old ThinkPad T60

https://btxx.org/posts/serenity-t60/
3•jandeboevrie•11m ago•0 comments

Forensic tools as instruments of repression: Cellebrite use in Russia

https://andreafortuna.org/2026/06/28/cellebrite-russia-pivovarov/
2•iamnothere•12m ago•0 comments

"Quality is downstream from caring"

https://graybeard.ing/quality-is-downstream-from-caring/
2•rglover•12m ago•0 comments

Bjorn Lomborg – 'An Inconvenient Truth' 20 Years Later

https://signalscv.com/2026/06/bjorn-lomborg-an-inconvenient-truth-20-years-later/
2•RickJWagner•12m ago•1 comments

CATL online store for direct sales of energy storage to small/medium customers

https://carnewschina.com/2026/06/26/catl-launches-online-store-for-direct-sales-of-energy-storage...
2•DamonHD•12m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Is Hacker News selling your email?

3•tyleo•15m ago•2 comments

Clarity, Accountability, and Care – The Three Conditions That Make Teams Work

https://nmcqueen.substack.com/p/clarity-accountability-and-care
2•backlit4034•18m ago•0 comments

Cachebox, a small cache server with TTLs, dogpile locks, tags and bounded memory

https://github.com/smarzola/cachebox
2•smarzola•21m ago•0 comments

California's landmark anti-plastics law sparks anger as 17 states move to sue

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/jun/26/california-single-use-plastic-law
4•andsoitis•21m ago•0 comments

Show HN: A REPL for browsers that agents love

https://fuckui.com
2•keepamovin•22m ago•1 comments

The dordolec, the 'evil eye' and superstition in Albania

https://michaelharrison.org.uk/2013/05/the-dordolec-the-evil-eye-and-superstition-in-albania/
2•jruohonen•23m ago•0 comments

The Fake Pilot (2010)

https://www.news.com.au/travel/travel-updates/fake-pilot-thomas-salme-says-passengers-were-never-...
3•redbell•24m ago•0 comments

The making of the digital twin of the Panorama of the Battle of Murten

https://www.epfl.ch/labs/emplus/projects/terapixelpanorama/murten-panorama-digital-twin-scanning-...
3•ano-ther•24m ago•0 comments

GPT-5.6: The System Card

https://thezvi.substack.com/p/gpt-56-the-system-card
2•7777777phil•24m ago•0 comments

City counsellors under fire for AI Orange Line map [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MmLikQaka8E
2•functionmouse•25m ago•0 comments

'Crypto vs. community': local US lenders join forces to fight 'stablecoins' law

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/jun/28/crypto-v-community-local-lenders-fight-stablec...
2•biorach•26m ago•0 comments

Clean GitHub repo tricks AI coding agents into running malware

https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/clean-github-repo-tricks-ai-coding-agents-into-run...
2•Brajeshwar•27m ago•0 comments

What is your most fascinating tech used in Formula1(F1)?

2•adithyaharish•29m ago•0 comments

Michigan bill would bar employers from requiring after-hours coms with workers

https://www.cbsnews.com/detroit/news/workplace-boundaries-act-employees-after-hours/
10•cebert•29m ago•1 comments

5k Restaurant Menus, Years 1880-1920

https://pudding.cool/2026/06/menu-collection/
11•xbryanx•31m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Austria Lobbies EU to Host Anthropic After US Access Curbs

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-06-28/austria-lobbies-eu-to-host-anthropic-after-us-access-curbs
50•root-parent•1h ago

Comments

ben_w•1h ago
Non-paywalled alternative: https://www.reuters.com/business/austria-lobbies-eu-host-ant...
uxhacker•28m ago
Actually I am been asked to pay for Reuters

Edited : this looks like it is in paywalled https://uk.news.yahoo.com/austria-lobbies-eu-host-anthropic-...

raverbashing•1h ago
Interesting country lobbying this. So this is either the OPEC effect or some active measures "another country" to sow division (because I don't think the Austrians were smart enough of think that for themselves)
tomalbrc•58m ago
> I don't think the Austrians were smart enough of think that for themselves

Leave your fascist remarks out of here

maximilianburke•45m ago
Ignorant, yes, but not fascist.
WhatsName•1h ago
To be honest, as much as people complain about EU regulations and bureaucracy, at least they are highly predictable. Every relevant piece of regulation, like the GDPR and the AI Act, was probably more than five years in the making and then added another year or two to take effect.

If I were a frontier lab with a billion-dollar investment under my belt, I wouldn't want to operate in a regulatory environment with the same prediction horizon as the weather.

SpicyLemonZest•43m ago
They don't go on random personalist whims (so far!), but they also tend to be much less specific in a way that can frustrate US businesses. The GDPR definition of "personal data" is just a couple of lines long; the California definition of "personal information" lists out twelve categories, one of which is "sensitive personal information" with eight more categories.
vrganj•37m ago
There's a fundamentally different definition of how laws are supposed to work. EU law isn't a list of checkboxes that you can technically check while going counter to the spirit, it is a philosophical direction, the details of following it are up to you. The spirit matters, not the letter.

> When interpreting EU law, the CJEU pays particular attention to the aim and purpose of EU law (teleological interpretation), rather than focusing exclusively on the wording of the provisions (linguistic interpretation). This is explained by numerous factors, in particular the open-ended and policy-oriented rules of the EU Treaties, as well as by EU legal multilingualism. Under the latter principle, all EU law is equally authentic in all language versions. Hence, the Court cannot rely on the wording of a single version, as a national court can, in order to give an interpretation of the legal provision under consideration. Therefore, in order to decode the meaning of a legal rule, the Court analyses it especially in the light of its purpose (teleological interpretation) as well as its context (systemic interpretation).

https://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/etudes/BRIE/2017/5993...

shevy-java•1h ago
Typical corruption in Austria, coming from the ÖVP.

Alexander Pröll is like Sebastian Kurz here. The ÖVP always wants to have financial interests leak into politics.

cromka•59m ago
Good luck with that after they effectively "appropriated" the pirated IP to teach their models and admitted to it. They'd be drowning in lawsuits. At least what I think would happen, IANAL.
delichon•56m ago
To stay near the frontier of AI without being subject to the discretion of foreign countries the EU has to stay near the frontier of R&D themselves. Even if they can get around ITAR now and self-host, they would be stuck with having to repeatedly negotiate permission to use each new advance.

If they do relax regulation (especially on energy generation) sufficiently to unleash the continent's big brained boffins and entrepreneurs on AI, they could quickly develop their own advances that would give them real leverage.

dgellow•23m ago
What specific regulations are currently blocking AI entrepreneurs?
impossiblefork•17m ago
There may be an advantage to be able to use all available data.
alephnerd•23m ago
> If they do relax regulation (especially on energy generation) sufficiently to unleash the continent's big brained boffins and entrepreneurs on AI

Capital. Capital, capital, capital.

The EU is still not a single unified economy and capital markets remains semi-sovereign.

Every Euro that goes out of (eg.) a Dutch taxpayer's pocket into an (eg.) German domiciled competitor gets pushed back against by national competitors as well as by the government.

You see this with French and German rivalry against Scaleway+OVHCloud versus Hetzner (edited because of early morning brain snafus) to Dassault versus Airbus.

But the issue is, a single unified capital market that overrides national sovereignty also leaves vast swathes of European voters at risk of unemployment via capital flight. You saw this with East Germany's shift towards the AfD following industry's shift to Poland.

So neither industry nor national governments (who remain the overriding power of the EU) have an incentive for a single unified market, and actually remain incentivized to work with outside partners instead.

afavour•54m ago
Interesting thought. But the Trump administration is absolutely vindictive enough that they’d put some kind of import restriction on Anthropic as punishment if they left the US and they won’t want to lose the US market, as much as the current situation works against them.
SpicyLemonZest•38m ago
I couldn't dislike the Trump administration more, but I think even the kindest and least vindictive of countries would not allow a company to relocate overseas to avoid export controls. (I had understood the proposal to be just that Anthropic should set up an EU office.)
anonzzzies•28m ago
> Anthropic should set up an EU office

I read that from it too, but not sure how it would help as that doesn't stop export controls.

general1465•54m ago
I don't think it would resolve anything. Mythos and similar models are under export protections. So even if you get hardware in EU, how are you going to get past the export protections?
vrganj•44m ago
Once you're no longer in the US, you're no longer bound by their laws.
_aavaa_•36m ago
But anthropic is. Hosting the model outside the US doesn’t do anything.
vrganj•26m ago
I think the idea is to host the whole company, physically.
procgen•42m ago
Dario is an American patriot who wants the US to win. Don't see this happening.
testfrequency•36m ago
I was getting heat for proposing companies do this if they truly care about their mission.

Even if nothing comes of it, it’s a healthy consideration to anyone operating in the US to really think about their goals and what best sets them up for success.

Many other parts of the world do not operate under the same capitalistic mindset that American companies are forced into by pressure of the systems they are beholden to.

khurs•33m ago
Anthropic already have offices across the world, including Europe, but unless they moved their registered address would be subject to the curbs.

If Anthropic quit the USA, Trump administration would likely make an example of them.

Wouldn't be pretty.

dgellow•22m ago
Anthropic engineering is in London and the US. The other offices in Europe are sales oriented
khurs•11m ago
Zurich is also Engineering (any many staff in Zurich and London will be from other countries temporarily working there).
int32_64•32m ago
Have OpenAI or Anthropic ever had a model hacked/leaked? Is there any good reads on their cultures of preventing it from happening?
varun_ch•28m ago
surely the weights for the model & the equipment to run them make it logistically challenging enough to deter that… also I’m sure models have leaked in their APIs before but those would be pretty easy and quick to catch/fix.
sarjann•11m ago
I believe Nvidia chips have a secure way to run your model on other infra.

https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/data-center/solutions/confident...

agilob•15m ago
US can simply ban export of AI tools and wieghts like they did with PGP. Austria should start using Mistral or open models.
impossiblefork•6m ago
I think what's actually needed are two things: an EU training infrastructure that allows training of 10T+ models, and an EU inference infrastructure that is sufficient that it's possible to do RL on them.

This effectively reduces the problem to a specialized supercomputing context. I think the chips are coming. I think Euclyd will be able to do the inference chip and I think the training chip won't be harder. It's just a matter of accepting the need to order a huge number of them, being willing to think a little bit like the kind of people who operate corners. So we can be there next year, I think. What we then lack is a training chip-- maybe OpenChip can do it, maybe they can't, but there are reasonable but still unfinished projects. Maybe if Euclyd finishes an inference chip in 2027 we can have the state pay them to make a training version, put in fp32, put in communication tiles. If their design is real and works (which it should, since it's basically a fancier version of Groq, as it's described, and since even Groq works) I think the advantage these chips is likely to have would be enough that a training version would be NVIDIA-beating.

We probably need some solution for the data, but I think it's a better idea to start EU firms.

Because of the need for capital the hardware-software carousel is necessary. We can't pay for NVIDIA chips and then have NVIDIA feed that money into US firms. We have to feed money into EU chips that either carousel the money into EU AI firms or who just offer cheap chips.

SpicyLemonZest•25m ago
Right! Thanks for the link, I remembered reading that quote but couldn't find it. European regulators don't need hyper-specific definitions, because to them it's entirely normal to tell a company that they must do X or can't do Y even though the rules as written seem to authorize their current course of action Z.

All regulatory systems have some informal edge cases, of course. But Americans expect law to in general work more like a list of checkboxes and rely less on divining the regulator's intent. Indeed, that's one of the reasons why the regulatory environment under Trump is so frustrating to many of us; in the American view, there's supposed to be a strict distinction between what the law is and what the people at suchandsuch agency think the law is supposed to be or meant to achieve.

dgellow•10m ago
The EU has pretty good documentation for the various regulations. For example for GDPR they do provide checklists:

- https://www.edpb.europa.eu/sme/be-compliant/respect-individu...

- https://www.edpb.europa.eu/sme/be-compliant/secure-personal-...

And guidance: https://www.edpb.europa.eu/system/files/2026-04/edpb-summary...

tchalla•6m ago
Unfortunately individual courts in some EU countries don’t care about the spirit but are fixated on the letter.
lostmsu•28m ago
5 years in the making AI act?
Y-bar•10m ago
The AI Act Regulation (EU) 2024/1689 was introduced as a proposal on January 6th, 2021, so it took a bit over three years for that specific piece of legislation until it had the final vote in May 2024.
dgellow•20m ago
I really hope that will push for completion of the single market. I wouldn’t bet on it, but that’s something we should have done a decade ago
alephnerd•19m ago
It won't. Once you actually visit Bruxelles or talk with ex-policymakers you realize they don't actually care to give up sovereign control to the EU.

It's still viewed as a prestige post, and European industries and states will continue to work with partners outside of Europe if it means surviving.

Additonally, capital consolidation within the EU also means subnational capital flight which means layoffs. For example, look at how East Germany shifted hard to AfD after Germany Inc left for Poland. Therefore, when push comes to shove, it becomes politically untenable.

blfr•15m ago
Both Scaleway and OVH are French and partly made possible by France's inexpensive energy mix.
alephnerd•11m ago
> Both Scaleway and OVH are French

Doh, I meant Hetzner

> partly made possible by France's inexpensive energy mix

Not really. Both developed well before the energy crisis when energy wasn't a significant input for DC construction.

The reason both succeeded is because French conglomerates continue to invest within France and only buy French.

It also didn't hurt that Xavier Niel and Klaba were able to leverage their preexisting telecom business and network.

re-framer•17m ago
What is it that makes gas power plants so much more attractive than renewable energy? From what I heard, it's a bit easier to build them very fast and they reliably produce energy on demand (as long as gas is available of course). But I imaging one could replicate this using solar/wind and storage units.

I could imagine that the challenge is that that having enough solar panels for a few gigawatts of consumption is hard to do on-site, so one needs to connect the data center to the grid, which, in turn, complicates matters and transformators are scarce right now.

Is this about right? I do hope that we find a way to do this more sustainably. AI doesn't solve climate change in the next few years, so clean energy isn't irrelevant.

dipierro•12m ago
As far as I understand, building a large solar farm is still considerably _faster_ than gas turbine plant.
throe9393i44i•2m ago
It is hard to operate renewables 24/7. At night and winter, you need a big array of generators and LED lights to shine on solars. Very inefficient.

Plus it sometimes rains in Austria.

cyanydeez•13m ago
Or they can just wait for disease and famine, along with Israel and Russia, to destroy America from the inside. Or just get their fusion projects working.