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Simple trick to increase coverage: Lying to users about signal strength

https://nickvsnetworking.com/simple-trick-to-increase-coverage-lying-to-users-about-signal-strength/
98•tsujamin•3h ago•19 comments

Facts about throwing good parties

https://www.atvbt.com/21-facts-about-throwing-good-parties/
348•cjbarber•6h ago•121 comments

Oxy is Cloudflare's Rust-based next generation proxy framework

https://blog.cloudflare.com/introducing-oxy/
24•Garbage•1h ago•3 comments

Paris had a moving sidewalk in 1900, and a Thomas Edison film captured it (2020)

https://www.openculture.com/2020/03/paris-had-a-moving-sidewalk-in-1900.html
219•rbanffy•7h ago•97 comments

Using FreeBSD to make self-hosting fun again

https://jsteuernagel.de/posts/using-freebsd-to-make-self-hosting-fun-again/
247•todsacerdoti•18h ago•67 comments

When models manipulate manifolds: The geometry of a counting task

https://transformer-circuits.pub/2025/linebreaks/index.html
21•vinhnx•4d ago•0 comments

Alleged Jabber Zeus Coder 'MrICQ' in U.S. Custody

https://krebsonsecurity.com/2025/11/alleged-jabber-zeus-coder-mricq-in-u-s-custody/
107•todsacerdoti•8h ago•24 comments

Why don't you use dependent types?

https://lawrencecpaulson.github.io//2025/11/02/Why-not-dependent.html
197•baruchel•13h ago•69 comments

Tongyi DeepResearch – open-source 30B MoE Model that rivals OpenAI DeepResearch

https://tongyi-agent.github.io/blog/introducing-tongyi-deep-research/
266•meander_water•17h ago•104 comments

How the Mayans were able to accurately predict solar eclipses for centuries

https://phys.org/news/2025-10-mayans-accurately-solar-eclipses-centuries.html
45•pseudolus•6d ago•9 comments

Lisp: Notes on its Past and Future (1980)

https://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/lisp20th/lisp20th.html
141•birdculture•9h ago•71 comments

Terahertz Tech Sets Stage for "Wireless Wired" Chips

https://spectrum.ieee.org/terahertz-chip-room-temperature
7•FromTheArchives•1w ago•0 comments

URLs are state containers

https://alfy.blog/2025/10/31/your-url-is-your-state.html
358•thm•17h ago•154 comments

Reproducing the AWS Outage Race Condition with a Model Checker

https://wyounas.github.io/aws/concurrency/2025/10/30/reproducing-the-aws-outage-race-condition-wi...
103•simplegeek•10h ago•18 comments

Why does Swiss cheese have holes?

https://www.usdairy.com/news-articles/why-does-swiss-cheese-have-holes
57•QueensGambit•5d ago•107 comments

Collatz-Weyl Generators: Pseudorandom Number Generators (2023)

https://arxiv.org/abs/2312.17043
11•danny00•4d ago•0 comments

Notes by djb on using Fil-C

https://cr.yp.to/2025/fil-c.html
311•transpute•23h ago•203 comments

X.org Security Advisory: multiple security issues X.Org X server and Xwayland

https://lists.x.org/archives/xorg-announce/2025-October/003635.html
151•birdculture•15h ago•114 comments

Is Your Bluetooth Chip Leaking Secrets via RF Signals?

https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/Is-Your-Bluetooth-Chip-Leaking-Secrets-via-RF-Ji-Dubrova/c1...
84•transpute•10h ago•19 comments

FurtherAI (Series A – A16Z, YC) Is Hiring Across Software and AI

1•sgondala_ycapp•7h ago

Solar-powered QR reading postboxes being rolled out across UK

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cgln72rgrero
40•thinkingemote•4d ago•21 comments

The x86 Interrupt List, aka “Ralf Brown's Interrupt List” (2018)

http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~ralf/files.html
65•surprisetalk•1w ago•14 comments

Autodesk's John Walker Explained HP and IBM in 1991 (2015)

https://www.cringely.com/2015/06/03/autodesks-john-walker-explained-hp-and-ibm-in-1991/
121•suioir•4d ago•61 comments

Anti-cybercrime laws are being weaponized to repress journalism

https://www.cjr.org/analysis/nigeria-pakistan-jordan-cybercrime-laws-journalism.php
267•giuliomagnifico•10h ago•79 comments

Backpropagation is a leaky abstraction (2016)

https://karpathy.medium.com/yes-you-should-understand-backprop-e2f06eab496b
301•swatson741•23h ago•125 comments

At the end you use `git bisect`

https://kevin3010.github.io/git/2025/11/02/At-the-end-you-use-git-bisect.html
174•_spaceatom•11h ago•143 comments

I ****Ing Hate Science (2021)

https://buttondown.com/hillelwayne/archive/i-ing-hate-science/
15•todsacerdoti•5h ago•10 comments

Scents of Arabia: Interdisciplinary approaches to ancient olfactory worlds

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-archaeology-is-reviving-the-smell-of-history/
23•quapster•6d ago•1 comments

Writing FreeDOS Programs in C

https://www.freedos.org/books/cprogramming/
96•AlexeyBrin•15h ago•49 comments

Amazon has launched a major global crackdown on Fire Stick piracy

https://www.the-sun.com/tech/15422622/amazon-fire-tv-stick-dodgy-apps-block-piracy-streaming/
64•swat535•5h ago•16 comments
Open in hackernews

Alleged Jabber Zeus Coder 'MrICQ' in U.S. Custody

https://krebsonsecurity.com/2025/11/alleged-jabber-zeus-coder-mricq-in-u-s-custody/
107•todsacerdoti•8h ago

Comments

nine_k•6h ago
«The Jabber Zeus name is derived from the malware they used — a custom version of the ZeuS banking trojan — that stole banking login credentials and would send the group a Jabber instant message each time a new victim entered a one-time passcode at a financial institution website. The gang targeted mostly small to mid-sized businesses, and they were an early pioneer of so-called “man-in-the-browser” attacks, malware that can silently intercept any data that victims submit in a web-based form.»
mikkupikku•6h ago
Imagine having these sort of warrants hanging over your head and just casually deciding to do a little international traveling. Guys like this are constantly getting nabbed this way. I wonder if being a wanted man for so long has some sort of psychological effect that makes people take more risks to get it over with.
pnw•6h ago
When you're living in the Russian-occupied part of Ukraine (Donetsk), I can see why you might run that risk.
anonym29•5h ago
This was a Ukranian national, not a Russian.
dragonwriter•5h ago
Yes and the sealed indictment from 2012 was unsealed in 2014, the same year as the Russian invasion of Crimea and Eastern Ukraine, which was also the direct trigger for Ukraine switching from a non-aligned position to seeking very close cooperation from the US.

I can very easily see how home in both the narrow regional and broad national sense could have become quite risky for a number of reasons for him from 2014 on.

anonym29•5h ago
Italian and Greek airports: the bane of otherwise untouchable slavic cybercriminals since 1994
chc4•5h ago
The human brain is just really bad at evaluating risk, especially over long periods of time. A lot of people are wanted overseas for years or even decades without anything happening, which makes it hard to maintain the mindset of being at risk without falling back to "eh, I've been fine this long"; a lot of them do foreign travel anyway and get away with it, which makes it hard to not fall into "what's one more vacation to a extradition-friendly country".
tobyjsullivan•5h ago
Hypothetically, how would someone know there was a warrant out for their arrest in another country? That doesn’t seem like public information.

I figure most cyber criminals assume they are untraceable until they get arrested.

mito88•4h ago
interpol
cwillu•15m ago
Is “interpol” public information?
irjustin•4h ago
I imagine the general assumption is that you don't realize that you've been ID'ed. That they traveled before and nothing happened so traveling again isn't a big deal because all the "tricks" they used to cover their tracks worked.
reisse•3h ago
From the other point of view, the abundance of stories when the high-profile criminal was catched doing something stupid, and the relative absence of ones when the criminal was catched in some clever way may mean the law enforcement is doing their job poorly.
Polizeiposaune•3h ago
Operation Flagship in 1985 was one of the clever ones -- US marshalls nabbed 101 wanted fugitives on a single day at a stadium, where they were expecting to receive two free tickets to an NFL game...

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

BolexNOLA•2h ago
> At least half of the 3,309 fugitives arrested in FIST VII were later released on bail

Lmfao god bless America right?

That reminds me of one of my favorite lines in one of my favorite movies, Thank You for Smoking. seriously if you are reading this and have not watched it, stop what you’re doing and go watch it right now.

Nick Naylor’s (a tobacco lobbyist) son asks, “dad, why is America the greatest country in the world?” Nick is reading something, doesn’t look up and takes a slight beat to think about it, then just calmly responds, “our endless appeal system.”

That movie is unbelievable. I know out of context that line just seems like edge lord nonsense, but Aaron Eckhardt (sp?) just sells it so hard.

cwillu•12m ago
I'm curious what you think “released on bail” means?
ghostpepper•1h ago
This must have been the inspiration for the Simpsons bit where the police set up a sting by offering a free boat giveaway

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YJKHw_CNYP4

johnQdeveloper•3h ago
> Sources close to the investigation say Yuriy Igorevich Rybtsov, a 41-year-old from the Russia-controlled city of Donetsk, Ukraine

I don't think it was casual traveling but getting out of a wartorn country.

dbancajas•1h ago
How can you ID these guys if they get a new passport. Changed hairstyle and do some surgery to the face?
normie3000•1h ago
Their name and date of birth?
manquer•1h ago
I would imagine that is lot more likely that is just only the official story rather than what actually happens behind the scenes in these situations.

In the background there could be deals with the countries protecting them or with the target directly or a existing deal they had is off now. It may even be unrelated, wasn't worth expending the diplomatic capital before, but they are a connection to someone else more important and so on.

It could also be the targets were captured in a illegal way, no country wants to be diplomatically humiliated and the prosecuting one wouldn't want to disclose their covert ops capabilities.

Announced News is more often only a Press Release, we shouldn't be taking them literally.

scoopr•5h ago
There is a bbc podcast[0] about evilcorp

[0] https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/w3ct89y8

morkalork•4h ago
The included photos are glorious
WD-42•2h ago
This is how I want to picture Russian hackers and they didn’t disappoint.
k33n•2h ago
Straight out of the 2001 film Swordfish