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Privacy and Security Risks in the eSIM Ecosystem [pdf]

https://www.usenix.org/system/files/usenixsecurity25-motallebighomi.pdf
100•walterbell•2h ago•21 comments

Download Responsibly

https://blog.geofabrik.de/index.php/2025/09/10/download-responsibly/
43•marklit•1h ago•13 comments

DSM Disorders Disappear in Statistical Clustering of Psychiatric Symptoms (2024)

https://www.psychiatrymargins.com/p/traditional-dsm-disorders-dissolve?r=2wyot6&triedRedirect=true
102•rendx•4h ago•51 comments

How I, a beginner developer, read the tutorial you, a developer, wrote for me

https://anniemueller.com/posts/how-i-a-non-developer-read-the-tutorial-you-a-developer-wrote-for-...
219•wonger_•5h ago•109 comments

Sj.h: A tiny little JSON parsing library in ~150 lines of C99

https://github.com/rxi/sj.h
380•simonpure•14h ago•188 comments

Why is Venus hell and Earth an Eden?

https://www.quantamagazine.org/why-is-venus-hell-and-earth-an-eden-20250915/
108•pseudolus•8h ago•152 comments

A Generalized Algebraic Theory of Directed Equality

https://jacobneu.phd/
8•matt_d•3d ago•0 comments

Simulating a Machine from the 80s

https://rmazur.io/blog/fahivets.html
24•roman-mazur•3d ago•2 comments

Lightweight, highly accurate line and paragraph detection

https://arxiv.org/abs/2203.09638
101•colonCapitalDee•10h ago•11 comments

Pointer Tagging in C++: The Art of Packing Bits into a Pointer

https://vectrx.substack.com/p/pointer-tagging-in-c-the-art-of-packing
36•signa11•5h ago•26 comments

40k-Year-Old Symbols in Caves Worldwide May Be the Earliest Written Language

https://www.openculture.com/2025/09/40000-year-old-symbols-found-in-caves-worldwide-may-be-the-ea...
136•mdp2021•3d ago•79 comments

Obsidian Note Codes

https://ezhik.jp/obsidian/note-codes/
74•surprisetalk•3d ago•16 comments

DXGI debugging: Microsoft put me on a list

https://slugcat.systems/post/25-09-21-dxgi-debugging-microsoft-put-me-on-a-list/
248•todsacerdoti•16h ago•72 comments

How can I influence others without manipulating them?

https://andiroberts.com/leadership-questions/how-to-influence-others-without-manipulating
87•kiyanwang•8h ago•62 comments

Nvmath-Python: Nvidia Math Libraries for the Python Ecosystem

https://github.com/NVIDIA/nvmath-python
43•gballan•3d ago•1 comments

Calculator Forensics (2002)

https://www.rskey.org/~mwsebastian/miscprj/results.htm
79•ColinWright•3d ago•35 comments

Why your outdoorsy friend suddenly has a gummy bear power bank

https://www.theverge.com/tech/781387/backpacking-ultralight-haribo-power-bank
208•arnon•18h ago•251 comments

Show HN: Tips to stay safe from NPM supply chain attacks

https://github.com/bodadotsh/npm-security-best-practices
47•bodash•9h ago•19 comments

My new Git utility `what-changed-twice` needs a new name

https://blog.plover.com/2025/09/21/#what-changed-twice
65•jamesbowman•9h ago•36 comments

Procedural Island Generation (VI)

https://brashandplucky.com/2025/09/28/procedural-island-generation-vi.html
53•ibobev•10h ago•4 comments

RCA VideoDisc's Legacy: Scanning Capacitance Microscope

https://spectrum.ieee.org/rca-videodisc
17•WaitWaitWha•3d ago•3 comments

I forced myself to spend a week in Instagram instead of Xcode

https://www.pixelpusher.club/p/i-forced-myself-to-spend-a-week-in
226•wallflower•17h ago•87 comments

South Korea's President says US investment demands would spark financial crisis

https://www.reuters.com/world/china/south-koreas-president-lee-says-us-investment-demands-would-s...
31•rbanffy•3h ago•8 comments

Node 20 will be deprecated on GitHub Actions runners

https://github.blog/changelog/2025-09-19-deprecation-of-node-20-on-github-actions-runners/
90•redbell•1d ago•34 comments

Timesketch: Collaborative forensic timeline analysis

https://github.com/google/timesketch
115•apachepig•14h ago•10 comments

How Isaac Newton discovered the binomial power series (2022)

https://www.quantamagazine.org/how-isaac-newton-discovered-the-binomial-power-series-20220831/
65•FromTheArchives•3d ago•15 comments

INapGPU: Text-mode graphics card, using only TTL gates

https://github.com/Leoneq/iNapGPU
63•userbinator•4d ago•8 comments

Unified Line and Paragraph Detection by Graph Convolutional Networks (2022)

https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.05136
91•Qision•16h ago•13 comments

Seattle, Tech Boomtown, Grapples with a Future of Fewer Tech Jobs

https://www.wsj.com/tech/seattle-tech-amazon-microsoft-jobs-95f2db27
46•mooreds•4h ago•30 comments

South Korea's President says US investment demands would spark financial crisis

https://www.cnbc.com/2025/09/21/south-koreas-president-lee-trump-investment-financial-crisis.html
148•donsupreme•4h ago•129 comments
Open in hackernews

The US Is Tracking 14 Potential Rabies Outbreaks in 20 States

https://www.accuweather.com/en/health-wellness/the-us-is-tracking-14-potential-rabies-outbreaks-in-20-states-heres-what-to-know/1817668
74•treasure2seek•3h ago

Comments

SilverElfin•2h ago
Scary. This site has useful information about rabies and the treatment but other articles say more about the outbreaks. So far there is no pattern. It spans the entire country, east coast to west coast to Alaska. The animals involved have no pattern either.
leptons•1h ago
Rising global temperatures will likely lead to increased pathogen activity.
seemaze•1h ago
Curious why that is?
jayd16•2h ago
Are the states a secret or something? Why say that and not list the locations?
12_throw_away•2h ago
Here's an article from late August with some detail [1], including the affected states: New York, Massachusetts, Alaska, Arizona, California, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, North Carolina, Oregon and Vermont. I can't find anything about it on the CDC website though.

Edited to add another charming detail from the article: "A 2023 study published in the journal Vaccine found in a nationally representative sample of Americans that nearly 40% believed canine vaccines were unsafe and 37% believed that vaccines could lead their dogs to develop cognitive issues, such as autism."

[1] https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/rabies-outbreaks-...

mulmen•2h ago
Is autism a thing for dogs? I have literally never thought about this but I guess it could be a thing.
MathMonkeyMan•2h ago
Socially awkward dog prefers not to dog.
mulmen•2h ago
Social awkwardness and autism are not the same thing.
southernplaces7•1h ago
I have no idea about the answer to this idea, but I did for a time know a dog that belonged to a friend, whose behavior profile across the board matched almost perfectly with how I'd imagine autism expressing itself in a dog. (the dog, not my friend)

That specific dog made me just assume it was a possible thing, though I never verified with any veterinary website. It's worth a deeper look though.

kulahan•56m ago
There is probably some analogous disability, but I doubt there is anything identical.
goku12•2h ago
It's absolutely scary that the CDC hasn't published anything about it. They were the ultimate source of epidemiological information, weren't they? We knew this was coming. But this is the clearest sign yet that we have entered the medical dark ages.
nelox•1h ago
Yes, the medical dark ages. Not the metaphorical kind either, but the kind where people die foaming at the mouth because their neighbor decided a rabies shot might cause dog autism. The CDC has apparently chosen the new strategy of “if we ignore it, maybe it will go away,” which worked wonders in the 14th century. Soon, every PTA meeting will double as a plague ward while Etsy sellers crank out crystal collars to protect your doodle from brain inflammation. The irony is perfect: the world’s richest country, armed with billion-dollar labs, yet losing a fight our grandparents solved with a needle and some common sense. When your local ER is triaging between toddlers bitten by strays and adults bitten by TikTok misinformation, maybe then people will realize the dark ages don’t arrive with torches and pitchforks. They arrive with Facebook posts and silence from the institutions that should have known better.
injidup•20m ago
I thought perhaps you were joking but it turns out people are also hesitant to vaccinate their pets.

""" About 37 percent of dog owners also believe that canine vaccination could cause their dogs to develop autism, even though there is no scientific data that validates this risk for animals or humans. """

https://www.bu.edu/sph/news/articles/2023/nearly-half-of-dog...

timr•4m ago
> I thought perhaps you were joking but it turns out people are also hesitant to vaccinate their pets.

Incorrect. Of the respondents to that paper's survey, 84% said that their pets were fully vaccinated for Rabies.

[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45329845

reenorap•41m ago
https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/rabies-outbreaks-...

CDC did publish something. The idea that it's "absolutely scary" is hilarious when you didn't do any research.

throw8398394•2h ago
In my experience dog owners just do not care. Vaccine costs time and money.

The same with training. Most dog owners are just lazy, and do not care. Adding some sophisticated explanations on top of that is pointless.

some_guy_nobel•1h ago
Well, in my experience, "in my experience" anecdotes are lazy. Though, I'm sure this is generally more true for some breeds more so than others.
throw8398394•1h ago
Those people do not care about basic hygiene or safety, but somehow develop and practise complex medical opinions!
Arainach•1h ago
Have you talked to the kind of American voter who spouts antivax nonsense in the last decade? Because "these people <are incompetent at thing X> but somehow develop and practice complex medical opinions <that they heard on TV>" is literally true for millions.
throw834949977•1h ago
Have you talked to average American dog owner? They leave their "kids" locked in tiny apartments alone for 10 hours a day, while working. Are not bothered if their "pet" is neurotic mess. If it becomes too annoying, it gets dumped into shelter or on streets. If it dies, it gets replaced in weeks!

You are really giving dog owners too much agency!

kulahan•59m ago
We get it, you’re depressed. Most dog owners like their dogs and take care of them to the best of their ability.
vasco•1h ago
> Well, in my experience, "in my experience" anecdotes are lazy

In this case this reinforces their argument

cameldrv•1h ago
In my experience, if you know a few people who are doing the same thing, that’s a sign of a trend. Jeff Bezos has this great quote: When the data and the anecdotes disagree, the anecdotes are usually right. I’ve also found that to be true. The people you know are different from the average person, but they’re not that different. On the other hand economic surveys and such can be very slow to respond to big changes.
elros•1h ago
In my experience, if you get a dog you go to the government and pay the dog tax. The dog needs to have id, be chipped, and comes with a token you put on the leash. Part of the process is enforcing vaccination. If a dog has no such token, it’s considered a stray dog.

To so many issues, watching as a bystander from the outside, solutions exist, but the US seems to have a penchant for ignoring them and then claiming their problem is somehow not comparable to everyone else’s.

timr•1h ago
This is not my experience anywhere in the US. We don't have a problem with stray dogs, rabies vaccination is ubiquitous, and I've never heard of anyone resisting it for their pets.
add-sub-mul-div•2h ago
We should rebrand vaccines as "freedom shots" and get AOC to play along and call them problematic.
southernplaces7•1h ago
Honestly, this is just stupid in just such a way that it might work well for the right kind of person. I'm not at all joking.
komali2•1h ago
The potato trick.

https://www.farmersalmanac.com/parmentier-made-potatoes-popu...

> Still, even after all of Parmentier’s work, the French feared and hated potatoes. But Parmentier was undeterred. Determined to prove to his people that potatoes were, in fact, good, he started holding publicity stunts that included potatoes. He hosted stylish dinners featuring the maligned tuber, inviting such celebrities as Benjamin Franklin and Antoine Lavoisier. Once, Parmentier made a bouquet of potato flowers to give to the King and Queen of France.

> With the publicity stunts failing to popularize potatoes, Parmentier tried a new tactic. King Louis XVI granted him a large plot of land at Sablons in 1781. Parmentier turned this land into a potato patch, then hired heavily armed guards to make a great show of guarding the potatoes. His thinking was that people would notice the guards and assume that potatoes must be valuable. Anything so fiercely guarded had to be worth stealing, right? To that end, Parmentier’s guards were given orders to allow thieves to get away with potatoes. If any enterprising potato bandits offered a bribe in exchange for potatoes, the guards were instructed to take the bribe, no matter how large or small.

> Sure enough, before too long, people began stealing Parmentier’s potatoes.

I've never known if the myth was true, but I've always wanted to try the trick with something to see if it works.

kulahan•57m ago
Maybe a more succinct and modern example: don’t put something on the curb with “free!”, put “$50!” And it’ll get stolen in no time
timr•34m ago
> Edited to add another charming detail from the article: "A 2023 study published in the journal Vaccine found in a nationally representative sample of Americans that nearly 40% believed canine vaccines were unsafe and 37% believed that vaccines could lead their dogs to develop cognitive issues, such as autism."

You should always go to the primary source.

Here's the Vaccine paper [1,2]. I don't say this often about papers, but this is total crap. They did a YouGov survey of 2200 people, and HILARIOUSLY, 84% of respondents stated that their dog was up-to-date on the Rabies vaccine (another 5% weren't sure.)

Oopsie! No matter...they just barge ahead with their pre-determined conclusions, and make a model of "Canine Vaccine Hesitancy" based on these responses anyway. BTW, I see no support for the claim that "40% believed canine vaccines were unsafe". The closest survey response is this one, at 30%:

> Most vaccines that dogs receive are not medically necessary

(You'll note that this is not a question about the Rabies vaccine. Just vaccines in general. And, of course, your guess is as good as mine what "most" means.)

The whole paper is almost designed to create a narrative of "vaccine hesitancy amongst pet owners" -- it asks some questions about how people feel about animal vaccine mandates and safety in general, then tries make a a model to predict negative responses (which they call "CVH"), and then they use that to predict opposition to mandatory vaccine policies.

At no point do they actually deal with the fact that the vast majority of their respondents, regardless of opinion, actually vaccinated their pet for Rabies. I don't know if Vaccine is a good journal, but this is just a classic example of a paper that should never have made it past peer review.

[1] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S02644...

[2] (full text of draft here, where you can see the data) https://ideas.repec.org/p/osf/socarx/qmbkv.html

izend•2h ago
I'm surprised they don't mention bats, every summer night they fly within a foot of my head and some poor guy died on Vancouver Island,

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/rabies-death...

golf1052•2h ago
They mention bats multiple times in the article

>In the United States ... contact with infected bats is the leading cause of human rabies deaths.

> The same goes for people planning to ... explore caves in regions where rabid bats have been.

>The clearest example is someone who has been bitten by a wild dog, bat, fox, raccoon or other animal known to carry rabies. If someone had direct contact with a bat — for instance, waking up to find a bat in the room — this is also considered a possible exposure unless a bite or scratch can be definitively ruled out. ... If you find a dead bat, do not throw it away. Do not touch it or allow other people or pets to touch it. Instead, call animal control so that the bat can be tested.

>In addition, try to prevent bats from getting inside your home through windows, chimneys or other holes.

some_guy_nobel•1h ago
This must be an LLM/bot account as bats were listed multiple times throughout the article...
naet•2h ago
From the related articles: https://www.accuweather.com/en/health-wellness/kissing-bug-d...

Chagas disease is the one that scares me, since it seems easy to contract and not know it. Rabies is definitely more lethal but hopefully you could recognize the exposure event and get treated.

southernplaces7•1h ago
Worth noting that many human cases of rabies infection involve bat bites, which (especially from vampire bats) can be hard to notice at all if they happened very suddenly or while you were asleep. The scarier thing is that once the virus is inside you, the arrival of symptoms can only mean that it's already too late for prophylaxis.

I remember the case of a woman in California, a teacher, who picked up a stunned bat that had accidentally flown into her school room one day. While she carried it over to the window to release it, the bat bit her without her even noticing. Weeks later she was diagnosed with rabies and died soon after. Only after the diagnosis did anyone make the connection to the incident with the little bat.

Just found a link, to confirm I'd remember the essential details right. https://www.cbsnews.com/news/california-teacher-dies-bitten-...

Edit: As for chagas, it's scary but not something worth blowing too far out of proportion either. I live in a country where chagas is endemic and even here it's exceptionally rare outside of deeply rural areas with lots of poverty and extremely low quality housing. The housing is a key transmission factor actually, since the bug tends to infect people with the parasite while they sleep, and it more easily enters barely-together rural shacks than it does properly built houses and apartments.

bawolff•1h ago
> six people have died from rabies nationwide since September 2024, a US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention spokesperson confirmed to CNN. In addition, the CDC is tracking 14 potential outbreaks in 20 states,

So is that high or low? It would be useful to know what the median and max cases per year has been over the last few decades.

14 potential doesn't sound that bad if we're investigating them out of an abundance of caution.

---

Edit: to semi-answer my own question, according to https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/reported-rabies-deaths?ta... there were 7 deaths in 2011. So we are in a decade high, but with the numbers being so low in general seems like it might just be statistical noise.

cperciva•1h ago
According to the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases, "about 1-3 human rabies cases are reported in the US each year": https://www.nfid.org/infectious-disease/rabies/

I would say that 6 deaths is definitely high compared to 1-3 cases.

Retric•1h ago
1-3 cases is nearly equivalent to 1-3 deaths.

Rabies is almost 100% lethal after symptoms develop, and we don’t count people exposed who don’t develop symptoms as a rabies case.

cameldrv•1h ago
In recent history, most all of the rabies cases in the U.S. have been from infections acquired in other countries. The fact that there are outbreaks at all is concerning and suggestive of an immunity tipping point being approached.
darkamaul•1h ago
The short-term effects of relaxing vaccine requirements won’t be obvious right away, but the consequences will likely compound over time. I don’t know how much time of lower coverage it will take before we start to see measles, rabies, or others become regular problems again.

If you’re traveling, it’s more important than ever to make sure your own vaccines are fully up to date. And if you’re in a high-risk group, the US may not be the safest destination in the near future.

timr•1h ago
> The short-term effects of relaxing vaccine requirements won’t be obvious right away, but the consequences will likely compound over time. I don’t know how much time of lower coverage it will take before we start to see measles, rabies, or others become regular problems again.

Whatever you think of the current HHS leadership, pet dogs and wild animals are not getting rabies from unvaccinated humans.

portaouflop•1h ago
But they get it from unvaccinated dogs? The point is that many Americans don’t want to use any vaccines anymore even for their pets
timr•1h ago
Citation absolutely required for that claim. Even ignoring the fact in order to get your pet licensed anywhere in the US you have to vaccinate it for Rabies, the transmission chain doesn't work that way.

When people get Rabies, they get it overwhelmingly from wild animals (or stray dogs in some parts of the world).

thaumasiotes•1h ago
> The short-term effects of relaxing vaccine requirements won’t be obvious right away, but the consequences will likely compound over time. I don’t know how much time of lower coverage it will take before we start to see measles, rabies, or others become regular problems again.

Rabies vaccines have never been required. You're only expected to get them after being bitten by a potentially-rabid animal.

watwut•52m ago
Some countries require them for dogs.
jandrewrogers•53m ago
Rabies vaccines have never been required. It is disingenuous to even imply otherwise. Humans are only given a rabies vaccine if there is evidence of exposure. Exaggerating the issue just gives average people reasons to disbelieve you.

Turning vaccines into quasi-religious totems is counter-productive. It should be a pure cost-benefit analysis. I am way more vaccinated than most people, side effects of my interesting career, but I am under no delusions that much of it is not an almost total waste as a matter of science.

Measles, yes. Rabies, lol no. If you conflate them people will rightly not trust you.

ycombigators•1h ago
Making America Gnaw Again
mmaunder•1h ago
Please stop posting this garbage. The US has 3 to 4000 animal cases per year and less than 10 human cases per year and the 6 cases is within the usual band. There’s no source, no detail, and the “14 potential outbreaks” are just business as usual with hotspots and alerts in those hotspots. The entire article is just a rabies faq stuffed with their ads.

Actual CDC data: https://www.cdc.gov/rabies/php/protecting-public-health/inde...

bestouff•45m ago
I wouldn't trust US health data nowadays.
oooyay•1h ago
A lot of intellectually lazy comments on this post.

Yes, there is a rise in rabies cases. In 2021 we experienced 2008 levels. The rise mostly has to do with domestic animal contact with bats: https://archive.cdc.gov/www_cdc_gov/media/releases/2022/p010...

It is also true that 40% of dog owning households don't get their dogs vaccinated because they don't believe animal vaccines are medically necessary or effective. 37% of dog owners also believe vaccines can give their dog autism: https://www.bu.edu/sph/news/articles/2023/nearly-half-of-dog...

There is no scientific evidence vaccines give dogs or humans autism.

timr•1h ago
> It is also true that 40% of dog owning households don't get their dogs vaccinated because they don't believe animal vaccines are medically necessary or effective.

First of all, no, that's not what this says. The exact quote is:

> according to the survey results, nearly 40 percent of dog owners believe that canine vaccines are unsafe, more than 20 percent believe these vaccines are ineffective, and 30 percent consider them to be medically unnecessary.

In fact, when you look at the paper they're citing [1], they notably do not state if the respondent actually vaccinated their pet. Not sure why....

(EDIT: Actually, it's worse than that! I found a draft of the full text, and a full 84% of respondents vaccinated their pets for Rabies! [2] You can't make this stuff up. See my other comment for more [3]).

Second, it's based on a YouGov (aka, a web survey) of 2200 people:

> The survey was conducted between March 30 and April 10, 2023 among 2,200 dog owners who answered questions through the research sampling firm YouGov.

I would be very hesitant to draw any conclusions from this at all.

[1] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S02644...

[2] https://ideas.repec.org/p/osf/socarx/qmbkv.html

[3] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45329845

tzs•52m ago
> Rabies can be found in many other wildlife species, including raccoons, skunks, coyotes and foxes

It's worth checking with your state's health or wildlife department to learn which of those may have rabies in your state.

There are enough geographical barriers to divide many of those kinds of animals into multiple groups groups that are have either no contact with other groups or only rare contact. You might say have two distinct populations separated by a high mountain range. You can then have a group on one side where rabies is endemic and a group on the other side with no rabies.

A great example of isolated populations is Washington state, where no wild terrestrial mammal has ever been documented with rabies.

Some still freak out on Nextdoor if they see a Washington raccoon wander through their neighborhood in the daytime, posting warnings to keep children and pets inside to avoid rabies. They are partly spooked by merely seeing the raccoon because they know raccoons are nocturnal and so figure something must be wrong with it to make it come out in the daytime. They've often heard raccoons mentioned as rabies carries so jump to that as the explanation.

Raccoons are mostly nocturnal, but they will come out in the daytime to look for food if they aren't able to find enough food at night. In a place where the raccoons are barely getting by they may be out a lot in the daytime and people would get used to it. But at least around here they seem to be fine most of the year. It's only when they are pregnant or have young that they need to come out in the daytime, and that's not often enough for people to get used to seeing them.