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Leaving Meta and PyTorch

https://soumith.ch/blog/2025-11-06-leaving-meta-and-pytorch.md.html
300•saikatsg•4h ago•49 comments

A startup’s quest to store electricity in the ocean

https://techcrunch.com/2025/10/22/one-startups-quest-to-store-electricity-in-the-ocean/
37•rbanffy•2h ago•28 comments

A Fond Farewell

https://www.farmersalmanac.com/fond-farewell-from-farmers-almanac
243•erhuve•7h ago•78 comments

Lessons from Growing a Piracy Streaming Site

https://prison.josh.mn/lessons
118•zuhayeer•3h ago•35 comments

You should write an agent

https://fly.io/blog/everyone-write-an-agent/
690•tabletcorry•14h ago•304 comments

Two billion email addresses were exposed

https://www.troyhunt.com/2-billion-email-addresses-were-exposed-and-we-indexed-them-all-in-have-i...
477•esnard•14h ago•321 comments

Kimi K2 Thinking, a SOTA open-source trillion-parameter reasoning model

https://moonshotai.github.io/Kimi-K2/thinking.html
760•nekofneko•19h ago•315 comments

The Silent Scientist: When Software Research Fails to Reach Its Audience

https://cacm.acm.org/opinion/the-silent-scientist-when-software-research-fails-to-reach-its-audie...
20•mschnell•5d ago•4 comments

Text case changes the size of QR codes

https://www.johndcook.com/blog/2025/10/31/smaller-qr-codes/
48•ibobev•5d ago•8 comments

Game design is simple

https://www.raphkoster.com/2025/11/03/game-design-is-simple-actually/
311•vrnvu•12h ago•91 comments

Show HN: I scraped 3B Goodreads reviews to train a better recommendation model

https://book.sv
421•costco•1d ago•145 comments

A Note on Fil-C

https://graydon2.dreamwidth.org/320265.html
178•signa11•9h ago•85 comments

Photoroom (YC S20) Is Hiring a Senior AI Front End Engineer in Paris

https://jobs.ashbyhq.com/photoroom/7644fc7d-7840-406d-a1b1-b9d2d7ffa9b8
1•ea016•3h ago

We built a cloud GPU notebook that boots in seconds

https://modal.com/blog/notebooks-internals
41•birdculture•4d ago•8 comments

From web developer to database developer in 10 years

https://notes.eatonphil.com/2025-02-15-from-web-developer-to-database-developer-in-10-years.html
77•pmbanugo•3d ago•19 comments

Cryptography 101 with Alfred Menezes

https://cryptography101.ca
48•nmadden•3d ago•5 comments

Analysis indicates that the universe’s expansion is not accelerating

https://ras.ac.uk/news-and-press/research-highlights/universes-expansion-now-slowing-not-speeding
184•chrka•14h ago•151 comments

Open Source Implementation of Apple's Private Compute Cloud

https://github.com/openpcc/openpcc
406•adam_gyroscope•1d ago•88 comments

JermCAD: Browser-Based CAD Software

https://github.com/jeremyaboyd/jerm-cad
24•azhenley•6h ago•10 comments

HTML Slides with notes

https://nbd.neocities.org/slidepresentation/Slide%20presentation%20about%20slides
55•Curiositry•8h ago•13 comments

OpenTelemetry: Escape Hatch from the Observability Cartel

https://oneuptime.com/blog/post/2025-11-03-opentelemetry-escape-from-observability-cartel/view
5•ndhandala•2d ago•0 comments

Dead Framework Theory

https://aifoc.us/dead-framework-theory/
45•jhuleatt•7h ago•48 comments

Swift on FreeBSD Preview

https://forums.swift.org/t/swift-on-freebsd-preview/83064
213•glhaynes•17h ago•136 comments

Time Immemorial turns 750: The Medieval law that froze history at 1189

https://www.ianvisits.co.uk/articles/time-immemorial-turns-750-the-medieval-law-that-froze-histor...
36•zeristor•9h ago•8 comments

Word2Vec-style vector arithmetic on docs embeddings

https://technicalwriting.dev/embeddings/arithmetic/index.html
21•surprisetalk•6d ago•2 comments

LLMs encode how difficult problems are

https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.18147
147•stansApprentice•16h ago•29 comments

Eating stinging nettles

https://rachel.blog/2018/04/29/eating-stinging-nettles/
216•rzk•22h ago•196 comments

FBI tries to unmask owner of archive.is

https://www.heise.de/en/news/Archive-today-FBI-Demands-Data-from-Provider-Tucows-11066346.html
880•Projectiboga•18h ago•441 comments

I analyzed the lineups at the most popular nightclubs

https://dev.karltryggvason.com/how-i-analyzed-the-lineups-at-the-worlds-most-popular-nightclubs/
160•kalli•21h ago•79 comments

My tutorial and take on C++20 coroutines (2021)

https://www.scs.stanford.edu/~dm/blog/c++-coroutines.html
19•signa11•8h ago•3 comments
Open in hackernews

Lessons from Growing a Piracy Streaming Site

https://prison.josh.mn/lessons
118•zuhayeer•3h ago

Comments

MallocVoidstar•2h ago
Previously: https://torrentfreak.com/hehestreams-iptv-admin-sentenced-to...
gethly•1h ago
> Specifically, in multiple communications with MLB employees, STREIT claimed that he knew MLB reporters who were ‘interested in the story,’ and stated that it would be bad if the vulnerability were exposed and MLB was embarrassed.

Oh man, such a stupid thing to do. This turned a $150k bounty into extortion.

jimmydorry•1h ago
> Streit indicated his work was worth $150K but was also informed there was no ‘bug bounty’ program at the baseball league.

Sounds like a bug that would have been better off anonymously leaked for the other IPTV providers to pick up, after said bug was valued at 0 in greyhat dollars.

NooneAtAll3•2h ago
> refund

ah, it's this kind of pirate streaming

MallocVoidstar•1h ago
The vast majority of pirate stream sites are monetized in some way. If I was going to use one I'd probably prefer to pay some small amount rather than deal with the hellish ads the 'free' ones use.
Semaphor•1h ago
Or you could use an adblocker.
MallocVoidstar•1h ago
A lot of the pirate stream sites I've run into break entirely if you have an adblocker enabled. I'd guess it's a combination of filter lists not being tested on them along with much more aggressive ads (from sketchier ad networks).
pferde•57m ago
Use a good adblocker. I'd never do anything illegal, of course, but a friend of my friend has been successfully using all sorts of pirated content sites for years, and swears he barely sees any ads.

Or, you know, don't. The less popular these sites are, the longer they stay around.

MallocVoidstar•46m ago
At the time I'm quite certain I was using uBlock Origin pre-MV3. I don't think I also had my DNS-based adblocker yet, though.
Semaphor•17m ago
Maybe I’m not using enough of them, because I’ve never had issues with uBo. Or it’s because I use 3rd party script blocking.
ngruhn•1h ago
Idk if I'm paying anyway, why not the legal way?
timpera•1h ago
I'm personally not into piracy, but with paid pirate sports streaming websites, you often get a better user experience and way more choice for cheaper than with the legal options. You only need to pay once and you don't need to jump between apps.
MallocVoidstar•1h ago
Much cheaper and no blackouts. HeheStreams was $100/year for NBA/NHL/NFL/MLB, the NBA's equivalent was $200/year in 2021.
aaaaaaron•1h ago
No DRM issues (like same quality on every device, no extra privileges), one application for everything, runs everywhere, no UX issues (e.g., long scrolling to continue watching series, no autoplay and no spoilers in the thumbnail). It's worth paying for such an experience, which the first parties don't provide.

(Speaking in general here, this includes Jellyfin.)

Telaneo•51m ago
IPTV in Western Europe is becoming more popular because it's decently priced for what you get. Say you want to watch football, but don't give a shit about anything else sports related. Well, you're probably still paying for everything else in a giant package for 50-100+ USD a month.

Especially for someone who only cares about their team, watching two games a month, that's a really bad deal. Even more so if your local offer is burdened with bad commentators or ads you can't get away from. Scale that problem up to someone who watches a few different sports, but none are available as one single package, and the value for money gets worse, while the experience grows worse as well, being you're now divided between several services. Add in DRM and bad app experiences, and you get people who just can't be arsed to do things properly any more, given they are functionally being punished for doing so.

Or you could pay a shady guy a few quid a month, but the service is good, and you get everything under the sun, moon, sky, and maybe even the stars. Can't blame them for wanting an experience that isn't trying to wring them dry.

moussasissoko•50m ago
I don't condone it but if you're in the UK and you want to legally watch every premier league game last season...

Sky Sports - £35/month

TNT Sports - £32/month

Amazon Prime - £9/month

And then in the UK there is a legal peculiarity whereby 3pm Saturday games are illegal to broadcast on television, so you don't even get that slot. It's the most common slot with about a third of the weekends games.

v.s. Paying someone on discord £8/month for all the games

walthamstow•36m ago
I'm sure Sky is a lot more than £35, is that number just for the Sports package on top of the basic sub?

p.s. great username

philjohn•22m ago
Yes - that's for Sky Sports.

You can often get a deal if you threaten to cancel, go through with it, and then wait for a retentions offer, but since Sky was acquired by Comcast that's happening less and less, especially for the superior Sky Q satellite service - you can get great deals on their Sky Stream service, but it's plagued with issues, and you no longer have the ability to time shift by having the main box record directly off the satellite feed.

You also can't skip ads unless you pay them, versus the ability to pause, fast forward etc. on the Satellite service.

NooneAtAll3•38m ago
> deal with the hellish ads

psst, kid

have you ever heard of adblocker?

gorbachev•6m ago
Many pirate streaming sites don't work with adblockers.
matips•48m ago
You always pay for piracy or it is bad experience. You have to pay in your resources (private torrent trackers) or in cash (derbit, usenet). Alternatively you use unstable and low quality stream.

Because of philosophy I prefer sharing resources more than cash.

lm28469•45m ago
I never paid a cent and always found what I looked for, just type whatever you're looking for + "torrent" on yandex and you'll hit something relevant very quickly
saaaaaam•23m ago
From what he says in the post I think this guy was selling pirated livestreams of sports - something that people want to watch as it is happening, not as a torrent after the event.
NooneAtAll3•34m ago
> You always pay for piracy or it is bad experience

definitely not my experience

Telaneo•27m ago
You have to go pretty far out there to find shows and movies that aren't on public trackers. I definitely can find gaps if I go looking for them, especially if we start counting not finding a blu-ray rip while a DVD rip is easily found, or not finding a 4K rip but a 1080p one is out there, but for most anything friends would have asked me to dig up, a high quality rip is easily found. Not to mention that once found, it can just stay on a hard drive and be easily retrieved for next time.

The only exception I can think of are local shows, but I don't watch them, specifically because they're only on Actual TV™, which I haven't watched in years, they only recently got onto the local streaming services. They should still be on local private trackers, which I can definitely agree is a hassle, but depending on how bad your local streaming service is, they can definitely a be a tempting prospect.

rikafurude21•1h ago
These kind of pirated IPTV services are very popular in middle eastern countries. You message some guy on whatsapp, pay him a couple bucks and receive a link to an APK file + login info. The app gives you access to basically any channel in every country. They have to do everything through word of mouth because its high risk, obviously, and even in developed countries you can get sent to jail pretty quickly for running something like this. I was expecting esoteric OPSEC lessons from this post, because if thats not the highest priority, its pretty stupid to even consider doing this.
JoeDohn•1h ago
it's the same thing in western Europe, piracy IPTV is a very popular thing since few years now, you get that through discord servers or really a simple query on aliexpress and you can buy a yearly account for 30$.
lurk2•5m ago
> and even in developed countries you can get sent to jail pretty quickly for running something like this

This would only happen in developed countries. Nowhere else in the world cares about foreign copyrights being infringed.

pta2002•1h ago
I found the whole site a very interesting (and fairly quick) read. I don't really have anything else to add, but I'm glad the owner manages to be honest and take good lessons from the whole thing.

It's interesting to me how from his account, everyone is fairly sympathetic to him regarding his charges (he mentions his employer showing up to his interview in a sports jersey in reference to his charges!), and how he mentions he knows several actual sports players used his site. It really goes to show the state of modern streaming.

b3lvedere•49m ago
It still amazes me that these kind of 'illegal business models' usually have a far better customer support than legal business models :)
Telaneo•46m ago
The illegal bushiness apparently has incentives to keep their customers, while the legal ones rest on their legal monopoly-laurels.

I'd imagine if we had a market where every service had access to every piece of content, so no exclusivity, this problem would go away. Then they'd compete on the quality of service rather than their selection of content they've held hostage. But as long as individual services can opt to not never share their content with anybody else, they can just hold their customers hostage, since they cannot get their good from anywhere else, so the only options are buy or don't buy.

FinnKuhn•40m ago
Shouldn't music streaming services be an example for a market where each service offers pretty much the same products and they compete on price and product alone.
Telaneo•32m ago
Yes. Although there are some gaps, you have to go fairly far out there to find them. Most everything is on every music streaming platform. The music industry got that memo after MP3 piracy became rampant.

But the video streaming platforms haven't gotten that memo yet and prefer to dig themselves into a larger and larger hole, both as far as normal Netflix style on-demand streaming, and IPTV style streams for sports and such. Hence why piracy of both are growing, with torrents on one side and IPTV pirate streams on the other.

paol•19m ago
They are, and that's exactly why music piracy fell off a cliff in the streaming era and movie/tv piracy didn't.

"Piracy is a service problem" -- Gabe Newell

gorbachev•9m ago
But they don't offer the same products. The UX and tools are largely the same, or similar enough, but the product is not the sasme. The product for streaming services is by and large the content catalog they offer.

Each streaming service has their own exclusive deals with publishers and offer a completely different catalog of music/movies.

This is why pirate sites are far superior, because they don't have those artificial limits on the product catalog offered.