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Dropbox Paper mobile App Discontinuation

https://help.dropbox.com/installs/paper-mobile-discontinuation
69•mercenario•1h ago•43 comments

Claude can now create and edit files

https://www.anthropic.com/news/create-files
298•meetpateltech•5h ago•174 comments

The Dying Dream of a Decentralized Web

https://spectrum.ieee.org/web3-hardware-security
26•warrenm•45m ago•12 comments

We all dodged a bullet

https://xeiaso.net/notes/2025/we-dodged-a-bullet/
374•WhyNotHugo•4h ago•228 comments

Memory Integrity Enforcement

https://security.apple.com/blog/memory-integrity-enforcement/
64•circuit•1h ago•9 comments

A new experimental Go API for JSON

https://go.dev/blog/jsonv2-exp
113•darccio•4h ago•23 comments

Mistral AI raises 1.7B€, enters strategic partnership with ASML

https://mistral.ai/news/mistral-ai-raises-1-7-b-to-accelerate-technological-progress-with-ai
664•TechTechTech•13h ago•359 comments

ICE Is Using Fake Cell Towers to Spy on People's Phones

https://www.forbes.com/sites/the-wiretap/2025/09/09/how-ice-is-using-fake-cell-towers-to-spy-on-p...
286•coloneltcb•3h ago•97 comments

Building a DOOM-like multiplayer shooter in pure SQL

https://cedardb.com/blog/doomql/
83•lvogel•4h ago•8 comments

E-Paper Display Refresh Rate Reaches New Heights

https://spectrum.ieee.org/e-paper-display-modos
21•rbanffy•1h ago•1 comments

Weave (YC W25) is hiring a founding AI engineer

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/weave-3/jobs/SqFnIFE-founding-ai-engineer
1•adchurch•2h ago

X open sourced their latest algorithm

https://github.com/twitter/the-algorithm
199•mxstbr•4h ago•112 comments

Go for Bash Programmers – Part II: CLI Tools

https://github.com/go-monk/from-bash-to-go-part-ii
42•reisinge•1d ago•3 comments

A clickable visual guide to the Rust type system

https://rustcurious.com/elements/
207•stmw•4d ago•37 comments

I solved a distributed queue problem after 15 years

https://www.dbos.dev/blog/durable-queues
58•Bogdanp•1d ago•16 comments

You too can run malware from NPM (I mean without consequences)

https://github.com/naugtur/running-qix-malware
156•naugtur•9h ago•94 comments

An attacker’s blunder gave us a look into their operations

https://www.huntress.com/blog/rare-look-inside-attacker-operation
89•mellosouls•3h ago•63 comments

Judge: Anthropic's $1.5B settlement is being shoved "down the throat of authors"

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2025/09/judge-anthropics-1-5b-settlement-is-being-shoved-down...
37•pier25•1h ago•13 comments

Microserfs ordered back to the office, given 10 days to appeal

https://www.theregister.com/2025/09/09/microsoft_return_to_work/
29•rntn•42m ago•6 comments

Show HN: An Open Source XR(AR/VR) Operating System

https://www.getxeneva.com/
5•ayush_xeneva•2d ago•1 comments

How can England possibly be running out of water?

https://www.theguardian.com/news/ng-interactive/2025/aug/17/how-can-england-possibly-be-running-o...
299•xrayarx•3d ago•453 comments

Tomorrow's Emoji, Today: Unicode 17.0

https://jenniferdaniel.substack.com/p/tomorrows-emoji-today-unicode-170
46•ChrisArchitect•1h ago•43 comments

Anscombe's Quartet

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anscombe%27s_quartet
95•gidellav•1d ago•24 comments

Yet Another TypeSafe and Generic Programming Candidate for C

https://github.com/brightprogrammer/MisraStdC
42•brightprogramer•3d ago•3 comments

U.S. Added 911,000 Fewer Jobs in the Year Ended in March

https://www.wsj.com/economy/jobs/us-job-growth-revision-a9777d98
116•JumpCrisscross•3h ago•10 comments

Disrupting the DRAM roadmap with capacitor-less IGZO-DRAM technology

https://www.imec-int.com/en/articles/disrupting-dram-roadmap-capacitor-less-igzo-dram-technology
26•ksec•5h ago•16 comments

William James at CERN (1995)

http://bactra.org/wm-james-at-cern/
23•benbreen•3d ago•4 comments

Synthesizing Object-Oriented and Functional Design to Promote Re-Use

https://cs.brown.edu/~sk/Publications/Papers/Published/kff-synth-fp-oo/
31•andsoitis•2d ago•4 comments

New Mexico is first state in US to offer universal child care

https://www.governor.state.nm.us/2025/09/08/new-mexico-is-first-state-in-nation-to-offer-universa...
681•toomuchtodo•5h ago•536 comments

Strong Eventual Consistency – The Big Idea Behind CRDTs

https://lewiscampbell.tech/blog/250908.html
135•tempodox•14h ago•60 comments
Open in hackernews

Australian startup joins race to build local ChatGPT

https://www.afr.com/technology/we-can-do-it-for-under-100m-start-up-joins-race-to-build-local-chatgpt-20250908-p5mt5o
77•yakkomajuri•1d ago

Comments

WaltPurvis•1d ago
http://archive.today/ELsbZ

(Note: The word "local" in the headline means "in Australia")

yahoozoo•1d ago
Yes it is much cheaper when you just train off ChatGPT and Claude responses.
zerotolerance•1d ago
Seems like a feature. This was always going to be the case. Just like how it was cheaper to train those models on billions of prior works than to have generated or paid to generate all those works in-house.
throwawayoldie•1d ago
> Seems like a feature

If by "feature" you mean "pathway to model collapse" meaning "disappearing up one's own asshole" then yes. And the sooner the better.

daveguy•1d ago
> "One test for potential investors will be their willingness to support Sovereign Australia AI’s decision to earmark $10 million of its future funding to compensate copyright owners for the data used to train its model. This includes working with news services under a paid model and buying books and music where needed."

> “We don’t want the adversarial relationship of most other AI builders around the world who chose not to take that proactive approach to copyright.”

> "Sovereign Australia AI said it would not scrape the pages of publishers who have added “robot.txt” files to their web pages. This is a line of code that tells bots not to scrape the information, but it is frequently ignored. The company will add a meta tag to every piece of data it acquires, recording where it came from and how it was sourced."

> To build its model, Sovereign Australia AI says it has placed Australia’s largest-ever order for sovereign AI capacity: 256 of the latest Nvidia Blackwell B200 GPUs which will be hosted inside one of NextDC’s Melbourne data centres

So... almost the exact opposite. Please read the article before commenting next time.

kadushka•1d ago
256 of the latest Nvidia Blackwell B200 GPUs

Did they forget to add "k" to that number? OpenAI plans to have one million GPUs by the EOY.

apparent•1d ago
They're starting out allocating $10MM AUD for copyright payments, when Anthropic has just paid $2.3BB AUD to settle their lawsuit. While I give them credit for realizing that $10MM is just the starting point, I don't understand how they can possibly build a competitive model while spending less than $100MM when others are spending 20x that amount just on copyright.
gpm•1d ago
Anthropic paid $3000USD per work because they pirated works and US copyright law comes with statutory damages completely unrelated to the amount it would have cost to acquire the same thing legally.

The same thing, legally, according to the judge in that lawsuit would have been a purchased (potentially used) copy of the book scanned - i.e. what Anthropic also did after pirating works. It'd be surprising if that would cost even $30USD/work, two orders of magnitude less.

$10AUD million doesn't seem sufficient for a competitive set (and as you say they aren't saying it is), but if you told me $50AUD million was enough to build a legal (according to Judge Alsup's interpretation of US law) repository of training data I would not be surprised.

apparent•1d ago
If they spend half of their budget on copyright, does that leave enough for hardware, energy, salary, etc.?
myhf•1d ago
LLM training is not fair use. It would cost trillions to genuinely secure the rights to use any data set that could include any excerpts of copyrighted work.

The millions and billions you hear about in copyright "settlements" are just the amount it takes to bribe a local court, so $10MM is reasonable for Australia.

danielbln•1d ago
I don't think it has been settled yet of training is fair use or not. Also, how is a settlement a bribed court? The other party has to accept a settlement, not the judge.
gpm•23h ago
> The other party has to accept a settlement, not the judge.

Not to defend the absurd statement about a bribe, but with regards to the $1.5 billion dollar settlement this isn't quite true. Because it's a class action the judge will also have to approve the settlement - finding that it was fair and agreed to without collusion. This is done because the incentive structures set up a bit of a conflict of interest between class action lawyers and members of the class... Of course none of the settlement goes to the judge or court, there's no bribing going on. But judges do reject class action settlements sometimes.

apparent•21h ago
You're right to point out that a judge's sign-off is also required, but it's a necessary-but-not-sufficient condition. The point GP was presumably trying to make was that bribing a judge doesn't get the job done. The first task is to convince the other side.
rpdillon•1d ago
The earlier Anthropic case found that training was fair use. Anthropic got slammed for how they obtained the digital copies, not how they used them.

> June 24 (Reuters) - A federal judge in San Francisco ruled late on Monday that Anthropic's use of books without permission to train its artificial intelligence system was legal under U.S. copyright law. Siding with tech companies on a pivotal question for the AI industry, U.S. District Judge William Alsup said Anthropic made "fair use", opens new tab of books by writers Andrea Bartz, Charles Graeber and Kirk Wallace Johnson to train its Claude large language model.

https://www.reuters.com/legal/litigation/anthropic-wins-key-...

nutjob2•21h ago
That hardly settles the fair use question. There are other cases that will address that question and will be appealed to higher courts where it will be settled, unless overridden by legislation.
rpdillon•21h ago
The law lives. The current ruling is fair use. Yes, it could change, but it's not like no courts have looked at or ruled on this.
crowcroft•23h ago
Do they even have $10mm? What exactly is being allocated?
apparent•20h ago
I think the allocation is purely a theoretical exercise. They have apparently put in a million dollars or something, and are now looking to raise more.
wtbdbrrr•1d ago
Now ... of course.

And do they mention anything about how much of the work is going to be outsourced and where to? Or are they gonna import workers to do the job and send them back home when their local AI can replace most of the easy and tedious stuff? Or are they gonna use local models to do all that right away?

The site is loading ...

loa_in_•1d ago
Looking for generous donors with this headline I'm sure.
Maxious•1d ago
> Our AI future is being built overseas. We can’t afford that

> Unless we develop our own sovereign AI capability from the ground up, organisations will forever be looking over their shoulder, dogged by fear of ending up on the front page of the papers for all the wrong reasons.

> Michelle Ananda-Rajah; Senator for Victoria

https://www.afr.com/technology/our-ai-future-is-being-built-...

The grift that keeps giving

gizajob•1d ago
The first thing ChatAUD says: "hawzitgahn?"
crowcroft•1d ago
A serious company would not consider this research. Zero evidence of anything is presented. No one in the organisation or advisory board have any expertise in building modern LLMs, and most are self-fashioned AI Execs that moved into the space all of about 2 years ago...

https://sovereign-au.ai/preserving-australias-digital-voice-...

msy•1d ago
This is entirely on brand with the Australian startup scene, absolutely lousy with hangers-on, cosplayers and washed-out bankers & consultants that have never built a thing. There's a lot of seriously talented engineers trying to build real tech but they get drowned out by this kind of rubbish.
nurettin•23h ago
Spoilers: They did not.