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Tau: A minimalist agent that teaches you to create coding agents

https://github.com/huggingface/tau
1•simonpure•1m ago•0 comments

Instagram running ads promoting child sexual abuse material in India

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cvgm4e0316zo
1•dwa3592•1m ago•0 comments

The Computer Lab of Your Dreams

https://www.mediaarchaeologylab.com/
1•mooreds•2m ago•0 comments

Victim Outreach

https://www.victimoutreach.org/
1•mooreds•2m ago•0 comments

You Don't Own Your .io or .ai. You Rent a Country's Politics

https://webhosting.today/2026/07/02/you-dont-own-your-io-or-ai-you-rent-a-countrys-politics/
1•speckx•3m ago•0 comments

Lightning Jazz

https://bengoldhaber.substack.com/p/lightning-jazz
1•lindowe•4m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Why submit your AI-written article?

1•blinkbat•4m ago•0 comments

Netflix Viewers Are Abandoning Shows After One Season

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/newsletters/2026-07-05/netflix-viewers-are-abandoning-shows-after-...
2•thisislife2•4m ago•1 comments

Show HN: JWT Lens – decode and verify JWTs offline, provably no network

https://github.com/milovance23/jwt-lens
1•milovance•4m ago•0 comments

Learning to Replicate Expert Judgment in Financial Tasks

https://thinkingmachines.ai/news/learning-to-replicate-expert-judgment-in-financial-tasks/
1•gmays•4m ago•0 comments

Typo – New CLI tools, Auto-correct mistyped shell commands

https://github.com/yuluo-yx/typo
1•yuluo-yx•4m ago•1 comments

DOE emergency orders let PJM curtail data centers during the July heat wave

https://www.utilitydive.com/news/pjm-doe-emergency-order-curtail-data-centers/820571/
1•gridmatters•5m ago•0 comments

Trucking Startup Aims to Challenge Tesla. Paychecks Are Missing. So Is a Truck

https://www.wsj.com/business/autos/a-trucking-startup-aims-to-challenge-tesla-now-paychecks-are-m...
1•JumpCrisscross•6m ago•0 comments

Multilingual Experience Linked to Delayed Aging in Populations and Individuals

https://fens2026.abstractserver.com/program/#/details/presentations/5474
2•bookofjoe•7m ago•0 comments

And yet It Moves

https://www.eso.org/public/images/potw2627a/
2•holofermes•7m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: What should I verify before releasing a P2P messenger?

3•Realman78•7m ago•0 comments

Kenichi Horie

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenichi_Horie
2•ike_usawa•8m ago•1 comments

Google Chrome Installed a 4GB AI Model on Your PC

https://oztalking.com/en/issues/hidden-4gb-ai-model
2•haebom•9m ago•0 comments

AMD Ryzen AI Halo – $4k AI Dev Kit

https://www.lttlabs.com/articles/2026/07/06/amd-ryzen-ai-halo
2•LabsLucas•9m ago•0 comments

Transparent Compression with Folder Actions in macOS

https://blog.gingerbeardman.com/2026/07/01/transparent-compression-with-folder-actions-in-macos/
2•surprisetalk•10m ago•0 comments

The Implementation Remembers

https://aicoding.leaflet.pub/3mobohx4fq22x
2•mooreds•11m ago•0 comments

AI gave you a promotion: Why AI isn't replacing jobs [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ItQnh3LWeg
2•teleforce•11m ago•0 comments

Apple Silicon Exec Explains Mac Mini AI Demand and On-Device Future

https://www.macrumors.com/2026/07/06/apple-silicon-exec-explains-mac-mini-ai-demand/
2•tosh•11m ago•0 comments

Apple and Broadcom Extend Chip Supply Deal to 2031

https://www.macrumors.com/2026/07/06/apple-and-broadcom-extend-deal/
2•tosh•11m ago•0 comments

Preempt_none Is Dead; Your Postgres Probably Doesn't Care

https://thebuild.com/blog/preempt_none-is-dead-your-postgres-probably-doesnt-care/
2•ryantsuji•12m ago•0 comments

Alibaba bans Claude Code over alleged tracking code

https://theguptalog.blogspot.com/2026/07/alibaba-bans-claude-code-over-alleged.html
2•sheelagay•13m ago•1 comments

Do you really need separate systems when you already have Postgres?

https://postgresisenough.dev/
6•b-man•13m ago•1 comments

Artie-lens – design metrics and a CI gate for TypeScript

https://github.com/ariusxi/artie-lens
2•ariusxi•14m ago•0 comments

Treasury Has an Internal Report Warning About the Dangers of an AI Bubble

https://www.notus.org/economy/treasury-internal-report-warning-dangers-ai-bubble
2•dartharva•15m ago•0 comments

Xbox to fire 3200 employees in 2027

https://twitter.com/asha_shar/status/2074124008795369482
5•bartekrutkowski•15m ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

UEFA slams FIFA's 'unprecedented, unjustifiable' Balogun decision

https://www.reuters.com/sports/soccer/uefa-slams-fifas-unprecedented-incomprehensible-unjustifiable-balogun-decision-2026-07-06/
40•root-parent•1h ago

Comments

alephnerd•43m ago
Meanwhile the UEFA was quiet when FIFA used the same Article 27 exception for Ronaldo in 2025 [0].

Maybe the traditional European teams should stop concentrating on personalities and start concentrating on team cohesion.

Look at how France was almost defeated by Paraguay until Mbappe was given a free kick, Netherlands defeated by Morocco (most of whose players would have played for France or NL if team selection wasn't so ossified), how Germany was stymied by Ecuador and Paraguay, and Portugal barely eked out a win against Croatia.

The Western European teams that have been doing well are those that have younger rosters and are concentrating on team cohesion and talent circulation (eg. Norway, Switzerland, England) instead of superstar player branding (eg. France, Portugal).

Either way, based on how Belgium played against Egypt and Iran, the US game would have been difficult for them even without Balogun.

If Western European and Cone (Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay are in the same boat) teams don't make national selections more meritocratic, the game will eventually shift to West Africa and MENA, especially given how much money is circulating in MENA football in preparation for the 2030 World Cup in Morocco and how diaspora players are increasingly choosing to play for their second citizenship instead.

[0] - https://www.theguardian.com/football/2025/nov/25/cristiano-r...

brookst•37m ago
I read the article and I don’t see where a head of state publicly intervened to suspend the ban?
dmix•37m ago
Every major sports league has a history of this inconsistent administration stuff. The goal is ultimately entertainment.
bhupy•33m ago
> The goal is ultimately entertainment

This is something I see so many people forgetting.

The net result of this decision is simply that the USA gets to play with their full squad and you have an actually interesting competition. The reason we as a world spend hundreds of millions of dollars to let athletes play a game for a living is pretty much exclusively for interesting competition. It serves no other socially useful purpose.

Embarrassing for the Belgians and the Europeans to respond any other way than: "we look forward to beating your best team, game on".

lotsofpulp•29m ago
It is more entertaining if the rules are the same for everyone. It would be fine if the official rule is red card disqualifies from next game until a dignitary calls. Or red card consequences can be modified for the top or most popular player on a team.
bhupy•17m ago
You're right, it's a failure of governance that FIFA doesn't have a proper appeals process for everyone to use. It is unfortunate that the only rules-based mechanism to suspend the match ban had to come from FIFA, which in practice will be arbitrary.

It was the right outcome, but the wrong process.

antiloper•39m ago
No way, the soccer federations are corrupt? I'm shocked, I tell you.
ActionHank•29m ago
So you mean to tell me that they are in it for the money and not the love of the game?
CodingJeebus•35m ago
International football has to be one of the most corrupt communities in sports, which is saying something. Between bribing WC officials to sway votes on World Cup locations and awarding the tournament to a country that saw 6,500 deaths of workers building the stadiums[0], to implementing dynamic pricing at the current World Cup, a move like this feels very par for the course for these guys.

0: https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2021/feb/23/r...

throwaya30103•21m ago
From the article you linked :

>There have been 37 deaths among workers directly linked to construction of World Cup stadiums, of which 34 are classified as “non-work related” by the event’s organising committee.

And regarding the 6500 figure (for the 10 year period 2010-2020) :

>While death records are not categorised by occupation or place of work, it is likely many workers who have died were employed on these World Cup infrastructure projects,

The recent heatwave hitting Europe is said to have cause 1000 excess deaths in a week in France alone (again numbers are projections).

baggachipz•34m ago
> U.S. President Donald Trump called FIFA to ask it to review the case

Gotta cash in that Peace Prize sometimes, I guess

> saying world soccer's governing body had "crossed a red line" and undermined the integrity of the game

Ah yes, the bastion of integrity defending truth and justice.

phlipski•31m ago
The rules need to be updated to better ensure accurate calls. If we can agree that Balogun's red card was overkill because his trip wasn't intentional then there should be a way to reverse the call. And Maradona's "hand of god" goal should have been reversed as well. There should be MORE than one ref on the pitch during these games. And spare me the, "This is how's it's always been" argument... It's the World Cup. Let's do better!
glimshe•26m ago
There is a rule to reverse the call on the books. Article 27 allows FIFA to replace the suspension for a probationary period. Of course the online mob didn't bother checking that.
CodingJeebus•22m ago
I understand the anger and I read the article, which mentions that. The issue isn't the rule, it's that a head of state (and not just a head of state, a head of the largest host state) allegedly called FIFA and asked them to intervene.

This wouldn't be a story if FIFA decided internally that the card should be suspended, but that's not what happened, so here we are.

this_user•16m ago
The rule does exist, but in all of World Cup history, it has been used once for this purpose over 50 years ago. During a tournament, it is understood that a red card means an automatic suspension for at least the next match. That is something that is universally applied. FIFA are clearly breaking with precedent here by using an obscure rule to lift the suspension of the host nation's player, which very much looks like favouritism.
charles_f•12m ago
banannaise•2m ago
Between this and the C.Ronaldo decision, I wonder if we're headed toward a future change to the automatic red card suspension. Part of what makes a red seem extreme for certain fouls is the automatic suspension.

The point of the suspension is to discourage deliberately violent actions when the current match isn't a major concern (i.e. late in games that aren't close, or when the result is largely immaterial). That obviously isn't the case here.

runarberg•29m ago
Where is the fun in watching a rigged game.

I‘m actually not sure this statement is true. “The goal is ultimately entertainment” is a thought terminating cliché. What about sportsmanship, competition, beauty, experiencing a common cultural phenomena with the entire world, etc?

But even if this statement is true, FIFA needs to learn from the failure of Eurovision and see that people are not entertained by watching a rigged game. For competition to be fun, it has to be fair.

NoboruWataya•21m ago
With respect, only an American would think that the competition ceases to be interesting just because the US loses. This is already shaping up to be a really interesting WC with or without the US.

Political leaders intervening to give their countries an advantage is what makes it boring. Tilting the scales in favour of a country where you are trying to grow the sport may make financial sense in the short term but it makes for a more boring sport overall. Look at the the historically great teams like Brazil and Argentina, it's not like they have the success they do because FIFA decided that would be the most entertaining outcome. It's not wrestling.

bhupy•18m ago
> With respect, only an American would think that the competition ceases to be interesting just because the US loses

With respect to you, I'm a lifelong football fan.

And read more carefully, the argument I am making is not that the competition ceases to be interesting because the US loses. The argument I am making is that the competition ceases to be interesting because the US doesn't get to field its best squad on account of a highly controversial on-field decision (itself downstream of a mis-application of VAR).

Let the chips fall where they may, should the USA lose after this, at least they got to make their best attempt at it. That's all I want as a spectator.

drivingmenuts•4m ago
> Let the chips fall where they may, should the USA lose after this, at least they got to make their best attempt at it.

Well, that, and a President who interferes where he has no fucking business whatsoever and a governing body who kowtows to that same President.

This is just flat out cheating. But hey, fuck the rules, right? 'Cause our team got to compete.

pmontra•27m ago
In soccer? I disagree. In Europe the goal is winning or at least seeing the main rivals not winning anything important. Entertainment is secondary.
bflesch•36m ago
Your statement is false. Ronaldo's 3-game-ban was reduced to the 1-game-ban minimum.

In the current case it is about reducing the 1-game-ban minimum to an unprecedented zero game ban.

lokar•33m ago
True, but they were different offenses.
fyzx•35m ago
Cited article says Ronaldo served a one match ban, out of a "customary" three match ban.
sailingparrot•24m ago
How has France no cohesion? It just so happens that they have enough superstars to fill the entire roster. You can remove their top 3 best players and they would still be one of the favorite to win. Cohesion and superstars are not mutually exclusive.
alephnerd•20m ago
> How has France no cohesion

Look at the Paraguay game. When striking, Mbappe was trying to optimize for making goals on his own instead of coordinating with Kone or Rabiot.

There were multiple cases in the Paraguay match when Mbappe attempted a goal in a risky manner instead of passing to Kone or Rabiot who were in better positions to goal.

Mbappe is basically concentrating on exclusively getting his own goals because he is on track to beat Messi's World Cup record and unlock a mess of sponsorships 4 years ahead of schedule.

Heck, all my Moroccan friends were rooting for a French win explicitly because they think they have a better shot at winning against France based on how France played against Paraguay.

Quite especially when the process seems to have been triggered by the head of state of that host nation
glimshe•6m ago
So what? It has now been used twice. I challenge anyone who's a soccer fan to look at the play that led to the red card and say "Yeah, that deserved a red card" with a straight face.

The outcome was fair. That was a scandalous red card and a rule that exists to be sparingly used in situations like that was triggered. Hopefully it will keep being sparingly used but they should not hesitate to overturn unjust punishments that are clearly against the spirit of soccer.

Why are people so upset about it? Is Belgium afraid to face the full US squad? If Belgium wins, which is the most likely result, nobody will be able to say "the US could have won if it wasn't for that red card!"

CodingJeebus•25m ago
There's always going to be a gray area when it comes to contact like Balogun's against Bosnia. Refereeing from one tournament to another isn't the same, the World Cup especially has this issue because the refs all come from different leagues around the world, each with their own skill levels and play styles. The technology helps to a degree, especially around more concrete rules like offside, but this will never fully go away, no matter how much process, people or technology is applied.
runarberg•21m ago
Maybe so, but if so then it should be integral that such decision needs to be taken by an independent panel, and not a single powerful individual of the organization, and that heads of state should not be allowed to influence such decision.