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The uv build back end is now stable

https://docs.astral.sh/uv/concepts/build-backend/
96•NeutralForest•1h ago•33 comments

Alice's Adventures in a Differentiable Wonderland

https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.17625
16•henning•2d ago•0 comments

Fei-Fei Li: Spatial intelligence is the next frontier in AI [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_PioN-CpOP0
162•sandslash•1d ago•59 comments

Astronomers discover 3I/ATLAS – Third interstellar object to visit Solar System

https://www.abc.net.au/news/science/2025-07-03/3i-atlas-a11pl3z-interstellar-object-in-our-solar-system/105489180
190•gammarator•10h ago•93 comments

About AI Evals

https://hamel.dev/blog/posts/evals-faq/
36•TheIronYuppie•2d ago•6 comments

Whole-genome ancestry of an Old Kingdom Egyptian

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-09195-5
119•A_D_E_P_T•13h ago•66 comments

Exploiting the IKKO Activebuds “AI powered” earbuds (2024)

https://blog.mgdproductions.com/ikko-activebuds/
532•ajdude•23h ago•204 comments

Kyber (YC W23) Is Hiring Enterprise BDRs

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/kyber/jobs/F1XERLm-enterprise-business-development-representative
1•asontha•1h ago

Show HN: HomeBrew HN – generate personal context for content ranking

https://www.hackernews.coffee/
12•azath92•1h ago•4 comments

That XOR Trick (2020)

https://florian.github.io//xor-trick/
185•hundredwatt•2d ago•89 comments

Trans-Taiga Road (2004)

https://www.jamesbayroad.com/ttr/index.html
115•jason_pomerleau•12h ago•63 comments

ICEBlock, an app for anonymously reporting ICE sightings, goes viral

https://techcrunch.com/2025/07/01/iceblock-an-app-for-anonymously-reporting-ice-sightings-goes-viral-overnight-after-bondi-criticism/
284•exiguus•21h ago•485 comments

CoMaps: New OSM based navigation app

https://www.comaps.app/news/2025-07-03/Announcing-Navigate-with-Privacy-Discover-more-of-your-journey/
23•gedankenstuecke•2h ago•16 comments

Tools: Code Is All You Need

https://lucumr.pocoo.org/2025/7/3/tools/
26•Bogdanp•2h ago•10 comments

Max, a Real Programmer

https://incoherency.co.uk/blog/stories/the-story-of-max.html
76•surprisetalk•3d ago•48 comments

Nano-engineered thermoelectrics enable scalable, compressor-free cooling

https://www.jhuapl.edu/news/news-releases/250521-apl-thermoelectrics-enable-compressor-free-cooling
85•mcswell•2d ago•41 comments

Head in the Clouds

https://www.commonwealmagazine.org/head-clouds
3•bryanrasmussen•25m ago•0 comments

ASCIIMoon: The moon's phase live in ASCII art

https://asciimoon.com/
231•zayat•2d ago•73 comments

Writing Code Was Never the Bottleneck

https://ordep.dev/posts/writing-code-was-never-the-bottleneck
460•phire•2d ago•231 comments

Show HN: CSS generator for a high-def glass effect

https://glass3d.dev/
352•kris-kay•21h ago•90 comments

Gmailtail – Command-line tool to monitor Gmail messages and output them as JSON

https://github.com/c4pt0r/gmailtail
93•c4pt0r•13h ago•18 comments

Couchers is officially out of beta

https://couchers.org/blog/2025/07/01/releasing-couchers-v1
219•laurentlb•19h ago•101 comments

AI note takers are flooding Zoom calls as workers opt to skip meetings

https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2025/07/02/ai-note-takers-meetings-bots/
214•tysone•19h ago•261 comments

A Higgs-Bugson in the Linux Kernel

https://blog.janestreet.com/a-higgs-bugson-in-the-linux-kernel/
158•Ne02ptzero•19h ago•24 comments

The uncertain future of coding careers and why I'm still hopeful

https://jonmagic.com/posts/the-uncertain-future-of-coding-careers-and-why-im-still-hopeful/
57•mooreds•11h ago•96 comments

Conversations with a hit man

https://magazine.atavist.com/confessions-of-a-hit-man-larry-thompson-jim-leslie-george-dartois-louisiana-shreveport-cold-case/
89•gmays•1d ago•5 comments

Features of D That I Love

https://bradley.chatha.dev/blog/dlang-propaganda/features-of-d-that-i-love/
160•vips7L•20h ago•145 comments

Demonstration of Algorithmic Quantum Speedup for an Abelian Hidden Subgroup

https://journals.aps.org/prx/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevX.15.021082
24•boilerupnc•9h ago•10 comments

Next month, saved passwords will no longer be in Microsoft’s Authenticator app

https://www.cnet.com/tech/microsoft-will-delete-your-passwords-in-one-month-do-this-asap/
142•ColinWright•2d ago•261 comments

Websites hosting major US climate reports taken down

https://apnews.com/article/climate-change-national-assessment-nasa-white-house-057cec699caef90832d8b10f21a6ffe8
463•geox•16h ago•254 comments
Open in hackernews

Abrego Garcia Was Beaten and Tortured in El Salvador Prison, Lawyers Say

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/02/us/politics/kilmar-abrego-garcia-el-salvador-trump-deportation.html
54•perihelions•7h ago

Comments

pavlov•7h ago
A country that specializes in building outsourced concentration camps and hosting foreign cryptocurrency hustlers.

El Salvador is starting to sound like the location for a side plot in a 1990s cyberpunk novel.

atoav•7h ago
Which explains why the administration has acted the way it did.

What has the US become? I am not surprised by the fact that Trump is a fascist, this is a thing I knew in 2016. What surprised me is how little popular resistance he has gotten and with which ease the US population gave away its rights.

I remember a time where americans scolded me online for my countries laws preventing certain types of speech (related to nazi insignia and Hitler), you guys do realize that if your government can just make up bullshit about you and send you to a torture camp abroad without due process, that free speech is no longer free?

Back then you people were adamant that your second amendment was there to protect free speech. But my suspicion back then was that this was mostly a thing guys who grew up in the comfort of a first world civilization would say to come across as tough and manly. And guess what.

khazhoux•6h ago
> What surprised me is how little popular resistance he has gotten and with which ease the US population gave away its rights.

There should be no surprise at what has happened, since this is what the US voted for.

easyThrowaway•6h ago
As someone from outside US but who spent some time in LA can't really believe anyone ever took those "second amendment" guys at face value.

It was always the most obvious cover for "say or do something we don't like and we shot you". The current US administration policies were always their end game.

ghufran_syed•5h ago
why would this be the case? Taking the 2nd amendment argument to its logical conclusion, wouldn't the speaker also have a firearm?
rgblambda•5h ago
The speaker would need to sleep every night with a gun under their pillow, in a room with no window.
easyThrowaway•5h ago
In a game-theory-prisoner-dilemma kind of situation, yeah, maybe. In the real world, those guys were always sure to point their to guns to those they knew very obviously couldn't retaliate back. And I'm not strictly talking about minorities, by the way. Simply, those who weren't part of their circle had a rough time and the police made very clear that they would act in their defense if anyone tried something funny.

I've only seen shit like this in sicily in the early 90s, when the mob controlled much of the big cities.

ethbr1•38m ago
This is how you get revolutionary militant resistance like the Black Panthers (and militias).
CursedSilicon•5h ago
I think this will be a veeeery unpopular opinion on this site. But I think the simple reality is this is the natural end state of unchecked capitalism.

The entire model the US has been on since Reagan has been a rapid, uncontrollable concentration of wealth into the hands of fewer and fewer. The reality of that is of course, wealth translates (roughly) to power

On the reverse, in an authoritarian state you need to concentrate power in the hands of as absolutely few as possible. The loyal ones who keep the empire running

Of course you also need to convince the working class to "play along" with your game as you fleece the blind. So you enter the role of the fourth estate, particularly after Nixon. You just have to convince enough percentage of the population that you're "fighting for them"

So you create enemies. "The Gays" "The Trans" "The Browns" and all other cornucopia of manufactured enemies. Anything to divide and conquer and prevent the proles from rising up and obliterating your empire

JumpCrisscross•5h ago
Decent hypothesis, but fails when we compare America to other capitalist countries. (Or non-capitalist countries, extant and historically, with extreme wealth inequality.)

This has nothing to do with capitalism and everything to do with Bush’s decision to invade Iraq. The police state we built internally, lack of trust we engendered externally, economic straitjacket trillions of useless spending caused to our livelihoods and then resulting collapse of the party of Reagan into the vindictive mess it is today, all of these trace from the Iraq War.

cma•5h ago
Under the first Bush and continued under Clinton, Haitian asylum seekers were interdicted at sea and sent to Guantanamo to avoid due process, which set the stage for its use in the war on terror. However, in these earlier uses it was for additional processing to give a chance at asylum for those claiming persecution and others not seeking it were deported back to Haiti directly.

But it was still used to avoid full due process. Under treaties that are supposed to be law of the land under the constitution, we are supposed to accept legitimate asylum seekers.

CursedSilicon•5h ago
>Decent hypothesis, but fails when we compare America to other capitalist countries. (Or non-capitalist countries, extant and historically, with extreme wealth inequality.)

What countries other than the US have the sheer extreme wealth inequality the US does?

Really the only other comparison is China. Which went from an existing authoritarian state to an authoritarian state using its working class as effective slave labor for western capital. It's "state capitalism"

JumpCrisscross•2h ago
> What countries other than the US have the sheer extreme wealth inequality the US does?

All of South America, Southern Africa and Southeast Asia [1]. Also every single pre-industrial society.

[1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_income_...

sureglymop•5h ago
I was about to remind the person you replied to that we are on hacker news.

Judging by the name you'd think it would be a place where hacker ethics are prevalent (which would be most close to libertarianism in the original leftist sense, or anarchism). But of course we know that that's not the case, given how the site came to be and who runs it.

Personally I believe that the situation the US is in can largely be attributed to the failures of the democrats. When, due to material conditions, the voting population increasingly becomes accepting of more progressive ideas but instead gets neoliberal pseudo-progressives like Hillary Clinton as possible president, they become disillusioned with their party.

If you live in another country, let it be a lesson that neoliberalism can help the convergence to fascism by dismantling the leftist counter balance needed to be in place and try to stop it while you still can.

orwin•4h ago
Note that this doesn't need to be neoliberals. Liberals/conservative do the same each time the status quo is at risk (see Spanish civil war). The most famous are Hindenburg and Papen making a deal with Hitler with the help of their midwife Shroder, because they were afraid of the agrarian reform supported by the left and saw the electoral decline of their 'center' and their right (including NSDAP) in the last free elections of 32. Nazi were given the power, they weren't voted into it.
rgblambda•5h ago
>were adamant that your second amendment was there to protect free speech

I've gotten into arguments with people (usually non Americans who tend to have an American tinge to their accents from consuming so much U.S. media) who are very pro 2nd amendment and wish their country had similar.

I always ask "How do you destroy an M1 Abrams or F-35 with a licenced hunting rifle?". They usually say "Well at least they have that" then quickly move the discussion on to something else.

Anyone who's seen an episode of Cops knows how much protection a firearm provides you against law enforcement. Zero.

matwood•5h ago
At an individual level you are correct, but that's not what the 2nd amendment was about. An armed populace can stand up to a government. All you have to look at are the wars that the US has lost - Vietnam and Afghanistan come to mind.

With that said, it's moot since a large portion of the population wants an authoritarian dictator/king. I'm not sure if the founders addressed the issue of the people possibly wanting a king again.

rgblambda•5h ago
I don't believe either of those examples are appropriate. The U.S military is never going to withdraw from the U.S due to the public growing weary of the war. The opposite would happen. The insurgency would surrender.

Also in the case of Vietnam, it's worth noting that the Viet Cong for all intents and purposes lost the insurgency. The war was won by the conventional forces of North Vietnam after the U.S ceased military aid to the south.

I also missed the most important point. Neither country had a 2nd amendment and both insurgencies imported arms illegally. And actual military hardware at that, not revolvers and sporting shotguns.

JumpCrisscross•2h ago
> U.S military is never going to withdraw from the U.S due to the public growing weary of the war

But the military may turn on its commanders if forced into a guerilla war against Americans.

The point is to draw out and make more difficult the oppression. There is a massive difference between pacifying a city with a couple of Marines and National Guardsmen and calling in air strikes on the homeland.

rgblambda•2h ago
>But the military may turn on its commanders if forced into a guerilla war against Americans.

You mean a counter-terrorism operation against "Unpatriotic terrorists"?

>The point is to draw out and make more difficult the oppression

You can achieve that more effectively with a general strike, without alienating those who aren't willing to fire on their own countries military. Legally purchasable firearms would be more of a nuisance than a threat for a modern army.

js8•4h ago
> With that said, it's moot since a large portion of the population wants an authoritarian dictator/king. I'm not sure if the founders addressed the issue of the people possibly wanting a king again.

You're wrong, twice. Most population doesn't want a dictator king. And founders actually put protections against such scenario, in the form of supreme court.

The actual scenario you're facing is the majority of supreme court (and congress) wanting (or willing to bend a knee to) a dictator king.

magicalhippo•1h ago
> Most population doesn't want a dictator king.

He didn't say "most" he said "a large portion", which is definitely correct since he got almost half of the votes. And he's been very clear about wanting to be a dictator, so it should come as no surprise to his voters.

matwood•1h ago
I said a large portion and not most. Trump was very clear what his intentions were and people voted for him anyway.

SCOTUS has zero ability to execute on their decisions - that's up to POTUS. Congress is also voted on by the populace, and most GOP not towing the MAGA line have been primaried because once again, a large portion of the population wants exactly this.

ethbr1•35m ago
> the majority of supreme court

Pointing out that if Ruth Bader Ginsburg had retired under Obama the SC wouldn't now be as extreme.

Pride goeth before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall.

yread•4h ago
I don't think you can draw conclusions from wars us lost if you cite such different examples as Afghanistan and Vietnam. By that measure US lost also in Korea and Iraq
throw0101b•2h ago
> An armed populace can stand up to a government. All you have to look at are the wars that the US has lost - Vietnam and Afghanistan come to mind.

The US did not 'lose' Vietnam to a bunch of citizens/people: it was fighting a proxy war against China and the Soviet Union.

Further, South Vietnam existed for many years and when the Paris Peace Accords were signed in 1973, and for a further two years. When the South fell in 1975 it was not because the US was beaten, but because it had moved on in its priorities.

The Vietnam theatre achieved its larger goal of driving a wedge between the Soviets and Chinese in the Cold War. See this lecture from Sarah Paine of the US Naval War College, "Who Lost the Vietnam War?":

* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tjXlvIBQmU0

JumpCrisscross•2h ago
> US did not 'lose' Vietnam to a bunch of citizens/people: it was fighting a proxy war against China and the Soviet Union

You really can’t imagine an American insurgency finding sympathy among foreign powers?

matwood•1h ago
Or sympathy among the US military itself.
shiroiuma•5h ago
>I always ask "How do you destroy an M1 Abrams or F-35 with a licenced hunting rifle?"

The same way the Taliban forced the US military out of Afghanistan, despite not having an air force or any tanks of their own.

rgblambda•5h ago
As I've said in another reply, the U.S public growing weary of the war would not result in a U.S military withdrawal from the United States, but instead would likely result in a surrender of the insurgency.

And the Taliban had Soviet era military weaponry, not legally purchasable under the 2nd amendment firearms.

spwa4•3h ago
I would argue that the taliban's scorecard in Afghanistan is pretty good.

Taliban insurgency vs USSR (technically vs "People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan", who, one might add, killed more people in peacetime than the Taliban did in wartime). They had the support of the entire population, because, frankly, the Taliban are an improvement over these communists. Communists left to make the terror attacks stop, and because the USSR collapsed.

Taliban insurgency vs US/International Coalition. They certainly did not have widespread support, with constant claims that it's much less than 50% (in an election, not that 50% of the population was prepared to fight). Essentially the coalition left and the Afghan government surrendered to make the terror attacks stop.

There's 2 lessons here. First, what matters is who's willing to fight (and equipment, to a lesser extent). Afghans are willing to vote against Taliban, but that's just not enough. The Taliban are some 10-20% of the population, and have since betrayed part of their own groups, so it's less now. Part of the problem is that nobody sees a future in Afghanistan under a decent government (or under the Taliban, but that doesn't matter, it's mostly people who can't leave). Two: terror and destroying everything and everyone until you're the only option left ... at least that can work. Communists demonstrated it doesn't work if you keep killing everyone but the Taliban don't do that. Life is terrible under the Taliban, but they don't kill large amounts of people, or at least not quickly. And the UN doesn't mind working with the Taliban, they're even prepared to exclude women from UN departments that work with the Taliban, so I guess that means they're "accepted".

I believe it's fundamentally an economic problem. Either there is some way to give Afghanistan a decent economy that depends on it's people, at which point the Taliban will have to make big concessions, or everyone basically "exchanges terror" with Afghanistan (not the Taliban, the entire population, the same problem as in Gaza if you will) to maintain some kind of balance. They kill/attack/kidnap/... people around the world, effectively in schemes to get money. The rest of the world attacks Afghans and Afghanistan to keep their terror below a reasonable level.

rgblambda•3h ago
I don't want to reply to your entire comment except to note that the USSR dissolved in 1991 and the Taliban formed in 1994.
throw0101b•2h ago
Mujahideen of the 1970s/80s -> Taliban of 1990s.

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osama_bin_Laden#Afghan–Soviet_...

rgblambda•1h ago
The Wikipedia article you linked does not back up your claim. Osama Bin Laden was not a member of the Taliban.

Some of the Taliban's founders had previously fought as Mujahideen in the war against the Soviets, but the government that the Taliban overthrew in 1996 was founded by the Mujahideen.

throw0101b•2h ago
> I always ask "How do you destroy an M1 Abrams or F-35 with a licenced hunting rifle?". They usually say "Well at least they have that" then quickly move the discussion on to something else.

In a historical survey of ~600 movements between 1900 and ~2010, researchers found those that used violence succeeded in their goals ~25% of the time, while those that did not use violence succeeded ~40%:

* https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/44096650-civil-resistanc...

You almost double your chances by eschewing violence. Further, they found those movement that used violence tended to then enact authoritarian structures (perhaps thinking that someone will come along later and do what they did in the same way).

sussmannbaka•5h ago
They didn't "become" anything. They didn't "give away" anything. The torture prison and fascism isn't a bug, it's a feature. People voted for this. A large part of this community voted for it, probably the majority.
lysp•5h ago
I also put this blame on the US supreme court too.

1. Presidential absolute immunity decision.

2. The fact that they constantly consider the dozens of presidential appeals.

If DT has no risk of jail, he does what he likes with impunity. Also the SC has allowed him to not take any lower court decisions seriously, by not rejecting his numerous vexatious appeals.

No accountability, no risk of punishment = free reign.

throw0101b•2h ago
> What has the US become?

It has become what the popular and electoral college vote wished it to become.

* https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2018/10/the-cruelt...

* http://archive.is/https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/...

suzzer99•6h ago
Andry José Hernández Romero, the gay hairdresser whose only crime seems to be having the wrong tattoos, is still stuck in CECOT. His lawyers haven't been able to contact him. No one's sure if he's alive. https://www.advocate.com/news/andry-romero-family-worried-ce...

It's important to note that he made an appointment to seek asylum, then crossed the border when it was time for his appointment. He was granted asylum for credible fear. At no point did he break any US laws as far as anyone knows.

tastyface•4h ago
And based on their rhetoric and behavior, I’m sure people like Miller and Noem only smile at the thought of what he may be going through.
thunky•38m ago
This story and others like it should be front page news every day until this abuse is stopped. Yet sadly this is the first I've heard about this man.
tastyface•4h ago
These do not seem like conditions that an ordinary person would survive for very long. What happened to the other deportees, such as Andry José Hernandez, the gay barber? Are they even still alive? Or just experiencing hell on earth every waking day for the crime of having some tattoos?

The people complicit in this scheme are monsters who've chosen to shed their humanity. Certainly the guards who partake in sadism as a career and enjoy it; but in particular that grinning ghoul Bukele and his virulently racist enablers in the US, as well as anyone who doubles down even after learning that many of the convicts are, in effect, innocent. For God’s sake, they prettied this man up, paraded him out to Senator Van Hollen, and cracked jokes about drinking margaritas. How morally vacant do you have to be to pull a stunt like that?

Even more fucked up that the whole thing was a farce to begin with, given the dropped charges against MS-13 leaders: https://www.inkl.com/news/trump-admin-dropped-charges-agains...

I desperately hope that all these people someday face their own Nuremberg.

potato-peeler•3h ago
Meta comment: have noticed some posts get flagged. Is it because they are political?
bananapub•2h ago
no, there's just a concerted flagging campaign for anything about atrocities perpetrated by the US government.
throw0101b•2h ago
See also "DOJ announces plans to prioritize cases to revoke citizenship":

* https://www.npr.org/2025/06/30/nx-s1-5445398/denaturalizatio...

"DOJ memo pushes for broader effort to revoke naturalized US citizenship":

* https://thehill.com/policy/national-security/5379452-doj-mem...

"DOJ directs US attorneys to seek to revoke citizenship of naturalized Americans over crime"

* https://www.foxnews.com/us/doj-directs-us-attorneys-seek-rev...