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We've extended Fable 5 promotion through July 12, 2026 at 11:59:59 PM PT

https://support.claude.com/en/articles/
1•theanonymousone•52s ago•0 comments

AF_ALG "Nightmare" Being Further Limited In Linux 7.3 With New Sysctl Knob

https://www.phoronix.com/news/AF-ALG-Restrict-Sysctl-Linux
1•Bender•3m ago•0 comments

Show HN: YOLO mode, not on your laptop

http://docs.voids.run/blog/yolo-mode-not-on-your-laptop/
1•zhshhan•4m ago•0 comments

Anthropic is launching Claude Cowork on mobile and web

https://www.theverge.com/ai-artificial-intelligence/961978/anthropic-claude-cowork-mobile-web
1•ilreb•4m ago•0 comments

General Radio Company

https://mitmuseum.mit.edu/collections/organization/3901
1•stmw•5m ago•1 comments

The Bessent Doctrine (Essay by Mohammed El-Erian)

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/07/opinion/scott-bessent-trade-economy.html
1•cs702•6m ago•0 comments

The Many Casualties of Precision Warfare

https://jacobin.com/2026/05/iraq-precision-weapons-civilians-responsibility
1•speckx•6m ago•0 comments

The Software Engineering War

https://www.manager.dev/newsletter/the-software-engineering-war
1•pmg101•7m ago•0 comments

America's missing middle: The shrinking 45-64 population

https://www.axios.com/2026/07/07/gen-x-population-shrinking-taxes-economy
1•toomuchtodo•8m ago•1 comments

Show HN: I Recreated Digg Labs

https://www.topaztee.com/digglabs/
1•topaztee•8m ago•0 comments

Enabling non-devs to contribute code at Slack

https://www.aviator.co/podcast/devex-slack-frances-coronel
1•tonkkatonka•8m ago•0 comments

"We're extending access to Claude Fable 5 on all paid plans through July 12."

https://twitter.com/claudeai/status/2074548242386178258
3•minimaxir•10m ago•1 comments

Run Multiple Claude Accounts Side by Side on macOS

https://old.reddit.com/r/ClaudeAI/comments/1uq27do/run_multiple_claude_accounts_side_by_side_on_m...
1•IGHOR•10m ago•0 comments

Your family's $300 stake in OpenAI

https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/07/06/1140176/your-familys-300-stake-in-openai/
2•Brajeshwar•13m ago•0 comments

I tried to build a post scheduler but meta app review messed it up

1•anirudh_parmar•14m ago•0 comments

Show HN: HTMLDrive – serve HTML files from your Google Drive

https://html-drive.com
2•debamitro•14m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Fence – Jiminy Cricket for AI coding agents

1•andriosr•16m ago•0 comments

Designing tech to have good etiquette

https://caseorganic.substack.com/p/sit-siri
1•SLHamlet•16m ago•0 comments

Review AI code line by line is like review movies frame by frame

https://bsky.app/profile/metaessen.bsky.social/post/3mq33yrxeh22a
1•lilerjee•16m ago•0 comments

Type-safe Django fork – Django-CFG

https://djangocfg.com/
1•Onavo•16m ago•0 comments

Emerging evidence links tire pollution to Alzheimer's risk

https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1134924
2•ndsipa_pomu•17m ago•0 comments

Manna (2003)

https://marshallbrain.com/manna1
1•Curiositry•17m ago•0 comments

I found 3 self-contradictions in the Agentic Commerce Protocol spec

https://github.com/baseballcubs99x-dev/acp-check
1•JBIRMING199•18m ago•0 comments

Trump renews Greenland threats at NATO summit

https://www.cnbc.com/2026/07/07/trump-nato-summit-greenland-us-troops-europe.html
2•tcp_handshaker•20m ago•0 comments

Incentives Drive Everything

https://yusufaytas.com/incentives-drive-everything
1•Curiositry•20m ago•0 comments

Managed Agents in Gemini API: background tasks, remote MCP and more

https://twitter.com/GoogleAIStudio/status/2074533418004591077
1•pretext•22m ago•0 comments

A dummy/debug app that runs a web server and prints environment variables

https://github.com/whalesalad/docker-debug
1•mooreds•23m ago•0 comments

Show HN: ComplyLedge – Clean, normalized OSHA enforcement data via API

https://complyledge.com
1•infinito25•23m ago•0 comments

Why we're moving Wire off Cloudflare Durable Objects

https://usewire.io/why-wire/architecture-benchmark/
1•jitpal•24m ago•0 comments

2026 French cybersecurity startup radar

https://www.wavestone.com/en/insight/2026-french-cybersecurity-startup-radar/
1•mooreds•24m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

China sentences official to death for taking $325M in bribes

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c33y0n1v1xjo
44•randycupertino•1h ago

Comments

mothballed•1h ago
Main difference between death penalty in US and China, is in US police officers easily sentence subjects to death and the courts do it with great difficulty. In China the inverse.

For instance, high level executive Bryan Malinowski was executed by the ATF and barely anyone noticed, but if the courts had sentenced him in such way, there would be great outrage.

pornel•1h ago
US president: I can take more and die quicker than the China guy!
SkinTaco•32m ago
Rent free
MaxHoppersGhost•1h ago
Wonder who this guy pissed off in the CCP.
onion2k•1h ago
I don't really understand the mentality of people who do this sort of criminal activity. If he'd stopped after, say, $5m and just retired he'd probably have managed to get away with it. Continuing to such a ridiculous degree through sheer greed led him to a death sentence. That's just plain stupid.
mothballed•1h ago
Once you start high-profile criminal activity you have to keep doing it to pay off the right people, as soon as you retire you're fucked.
starik36•1h ago
Think of Breaking Bad. His wife literally asked him this same question. When is it enough?

It's a mentality where you can't stop.

iamacyborg•32m ago
Breaking Bad is a work of fiction.
lonely_wanderer•57m ago
In for a penny, in for a pound. Unless you are extremely crafty, you don’t get to retire from this sort of criminality. Everyone who enabled you wants more and you have a semi-permanent metaphorical sword hanging over your head.
vitally3643•49m ago
Or you use your single digit millions of currency to buy an island and retire for a decade or two while everyone forgets you exist
TrackerFF•1h ago
I sometimes see people "celebrate" this, with the rationale that China is cracking down on white-collar crimes and handing out sentences unheard of in the west.

But, are these sort of things just examples of selective prosecution? Would the inner circle members of CCP leadership realistically face the same prosecution and sentencing, if they were to be caught doing the same?

mittensc•1h ago
You can ask the same about inner circle of current US leadership

It will have the same answer, no

who would be able to prosecute them and how?

who would even investigate them

MattDamonSpace•1h ago
Yeah but that’s bad right
mittensc•59m ago
of course
glenstein•26m ago
The Achilles heel of all whataboutism is assuming someone can't consistently criticize the new thing in addition to the original thing.
NooneAtAll3•55m ago
You're trying to approach from the wrong side

it's not a question of "prosecute this one or the other person" - it's the choice between "prosecute this one or nobody"

thus celebration that at least something got done

1970-01-01•53m ago
I wonder if he could have lived if it was just one $325M bribe and not 30 years of bribery.
vrganj•53m ago
Imagine if the US punished its corrupt officials. It might have to kill its own president.

Oh how the mighty have fallen.

felooboolooomba•48m ago
That's a bit harsh. It's not like he took a $400 million jet.
varispeed•52m ago
It's a shame we relabelled corruption as lobbying. The damage it has done is untold.

One thing that China does should be adopted in the West.

feverzsj•50m ago
A relatively low level official can't take this much bribes. More like a scapegoat.
throwaway27448•49m ago
Over thirty years? I am surprised he didn't take more.
mothballed•49m ago
Nah he took the bribes and probably paid 90% upward/laterally. Being the guy that actually takes the bribe is likely part of how he got promoted to where he is, in a way, like a soldier who gets promoted for being a calculated risk taker.
gitpusher•47m ago
It's not outside the realm of possibility for the positions he occupied. But yes, corruption is selectively cracked down upon in China
hangonhn•26m ago
Hang on. City level officials play an incredibly important role in China. While Nanjing is not in the same tier as Shanghai, Beijing, or Shenzhen, it is in the tier just below them. It is the provincial capital of one of China's most important provinces -- GDP similar to Texas. Many large Chinese companies are often tied to specific cities -- they get grants and subsidies via the city they are located in.

This guy did it over 30 years so it is feasible.

Scapegoat isn't the right term but I think it is very possible he is being executed to essentially send a message. I think your bigger point that there are way more corrupt officials than just this guy involved seems very plausible.

jqpabc123•50m ago
Corruption is the most significant threat China has left now that Western capitalism has surrendered.

Tariffs on all things Chinese is pretty much an open admission that the West can't compete.

rirze•15m ago
What happens to the money in these cases? I could imagine the official taking solace knowing the money he amassed over the years would eventually go his family.
greenavocado•40m ago
One does not simply move money out of China
Retric•31m ago
The options increase when you’re already breaking the law.
greenavocado•6m ago
They will send people after you at some point like they did to Vadym Yermolaiev
arkhiver•15m ago
Cryptocurrency or GPUs. Both are fairly easy to obtain and even easier to move out.
onion2k•40m ago
Unless you are extremely crafty, you don’t get to retire from this sort of criminality.

He got away with it for 30 years. That shows at least some level of craftiness.

jjk166•54m ago
It's the wielding of power which is intoxicating, the monetary amount just illustrates how many decisions he could personally influence.
throwaway27448•48m ago
People get away with this all the time—you just only hear about the stupid ones.
__patchbit__•14m ago
$2 million in cash flushed down the toilet, manually, that clogged the sanitation system was a very stupid funny one.
d5lt5•24m ago
The culture of bribes is a bit different in China. 'Mutually assured corruption' describes the situation better.
grvbck•34m ago
I understand that perspective to some degree, but imagine a hypothetical country with say, two parties in power, where prosecutors only crack down on white collar criminals if they are supporters of one party and not the other. We would call that system corrupt, and probably not celebrate that at least some of the criminals face justice.

Also, from a practical standpoint, charging some and not others is not necessarily better if the selection is made politically. That moves the needle from "at least something got done" to "law is just a tool of oppression".

fellowniusmonk•22m ago
How else do you propose a system that is fucked like that ever gets unfucked?

What you are alluding to in a kinda of handwavy way is that once a situation is sufficiently corrupt there is no path out of it that includes any amount of justice.

I think your attitude betrays an epistemic position that basically the rule of law can't exist and can't ever be recovered.

I think that's pretty defeatist and lame.

glenstein•28m ago
>it's the choice between "prosecute this one or nobody"

Even that assumes a normal of being lucky that anything is prosecuted, ever. So it's good but against a low bar rather than rising to the bar parent commenter suggested.

throwaway27448•47m ago
At least they try to appear anti-corruption—that's certainly more than you can say about the west.
lysace•42m ago
Don't confuse "the west" with the US. The US is less than half of "the west".
throwaway27448•37m ago
Are you claiming Europe is not obviously corrupt? Or Latin America? Or Korea, or Japan? I can't speak to Australia or New Zealand, I suppose.

Corruption is, of course, universal. China has a corruption problem that will be eternally difficult to tackle from the top-down—local officials are notoriously much more corrupt than central ones. But in the west, we simply pretend to not have the issue at all, or we simply make it legal. I would prefer if our politicians or popular media could at least acknowledge this.

lysace•18m ago
You are shifting the goalposts. You first said "at least they try to appear anti-corruption".

This thing about not caring about appearances is new. (And also the only thing I commented about.)

myrmidon•18m ago
> Corruption is, of course, universal.

So is crime. But it's all about prevalence.

And not just because corruption has some "indirect taxation" effect, but also because low corruption/trust is a big enabler for a society.

You are never gonna get rid of clannish mentality, vigilantism, nepotism and other undesirable behavior if your citizens don't have any trust in the system.

If you just look at e.g.:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_Corruptio...

you will see that the spread is very wide, and China/India is significantly behind most western nations.

ozgrakkurt•47m ago
Killing people in any context is barbaric because it is not possible to bring someone back from the dead.

I’m not a law expert but it seems pretty basic that there shouldn’t be irreversible punishment.

Also there should be equity which means everyone that does the same crime should face the same consequence, which doesn’t happen anywhere in the world as far as I can understand.

So harsher punishment means people with less power will get shafted harder

luqtas•22m ago
barbaric is society which has half of the worlwide population living with less than 6 USD per day in borderline slavery
cavoirom•20m ago
> I’m not a law expert but it seems pretty basic that there shouldn’t be irreversible punishment.

I agree with you, but we also can't reverse entropy.

casey2•45m ago
The top is already pushed with prisoner for life. In a tiered society a well functioning country focuses on the tier that is current bottleneck.
toomuchtodo•38m ago
A win is a win. Could there be more wins? Glass is half full.
ianm218•28m ago
5 of the 7 highest ranking officials have been purged in recent years [1].

It’s not totally clear what the consequences were for those purged or if their crimes were legit but seems like they are all in prison.

[1]. https://www.afpc.org/publications/articles/the-inevitability...

Barrin92•27m ago
>Would the inner circle members of CCP leadership realistically face the same prosecution and sentencing

no need to speculate, it's already happened. Zhou Yongkang who was a member of the Politburo Standing Committee (the highest governing body in Chinese politics) was prosecuted, and up until that point people at the top were considered relatively untouchable. Xi also axed the last to vice chairmen of the central military commission, Xu Caihou and Guo Boxiong, that's the commander in chief of the PLA.

lyu07282•14m ago
> Would the inner circle members of CCP leadership realistically face the same prosecution and sentencing, if they were to be caught doing the same?

The west is inundated with simplistic anti-chinese propaganda, so you would never perceive it as such, the way it would be presented to you in the west is as the evil dictator Xi Jingping purging his opposition, for instance:

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-41670162