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Jemalloc un-abandoned by Meta

https://engineering.fb.com/2026/03/02/data-infrastructure/investing-in-infrastructure-metas-renew...
69•hahahacorn•41m ago•13 comments

The “small web” is bigger than you might think

https://kevinboone.me/small_web_is_big.html
96•speckx•1h ago•27 comments

Palestinian boy, 12, describes how Israeli forces killed his family in car

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c70n2x7p22do
109•tartoran•15m ago•6 comments

My Journey to a reliable and enjoyable locally hosted voice assistant

https://community.home-assistant.io/t/my-journey-to-a-reliable-and-enjoyable-locally-hosted-voice...
196•Vaslo•5h ago•64 comments

Apideck CLI – An AI-agent interface with much lower context consumption than MCP

https://www.apideck.com/blog/mcp-server-eating-context-window-cli-alternative
76•gertjandewilde•3h ago•78 comments

Launch HN: Voygr (YC W26) – A better maps API for agents and AI apps

34•ymarkov•2h ago•15 comments

Why I love FreeBSD

https://it-notes.dragas.net/2026/03/16/why-i-love-freebsd/
223•enz•7h ago•83 comments

Cert Authorities Check for DNSSEC from Today

https://www.grepular.com/Cert_Authorities_Check_for_DNSSEC_From_Today
51•zdw•20h ago•51 comments

Language Model Teams as Distrbuted Systems

https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.12229
12•jryio•1h ago•1 comments

Kaizen (YC P25) Hiring Eng, GTM, Cos to Automate BPOs

https://www.kaizenautomation.com/careers
1•michaelssilver•1h ago

Polymarket gamblers threaten to kill me over Iran missile story

https://www.timesofisrael.com/gamblers-trying-to-win-a-bet-on-polymarket-are-vowing-to-kill-me-if...
927•defly•6h ago•580 comments

Corruption erodes social trust more in democracies than in autocracies

https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/political-science/articles/10.3389/fpos.2026.1779810/full
556•PaulHoule•7h ago•273 comments

US Job Market Visualizer

https://karpathy.ai/jobs/
259•andygcook•3h ago•220 comments

Launch HN: Chamber (YC W26) – An AI Teammate for GPU Infrastructure

https://www.usechamber.io/
7•jshen96•1h ago•2 comments

Lazycut: A simple terminal video trimmer using FFmpeg

https://github.com/emin-ozata/lazycut
94•masterpos•6h ago•33 comments

Starlink Mini as a failover

https://www.jackpearce.co.uk/posts/starlink-failover/
55•jkpe•10h ago•80 comments

The return-to-the-office trend backfires

https://thehill.com/opinion/technology/5775420-remote-first-productivity-growth/
32•penguin_booze•40m ago•5 comments

Home Assistant waters my plants

https://finnian.io/blog/home-assistant-waters-my-plants/
200•finniananderson•4d ago•91 comments

MoD sources warn Palantir role at heart of government is threat to UK security

https://www.thenerve.news/p/palantir-technologies-uk-mod-sources-government-data-insights-securit...
466•vrganj•6h ago•173 comments

Speed at the cost of quality: Study of use of Cursor AI in open source projects

https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.04427
39•wek•1h ago•16 comments

Even faster asin() was staring right at me

https://16bpp.net/blog/post/even-faster-asin-was-staring-right-at-me/
75•def-pri-pub•6h ago•39 comments

Kona EV Hacking

http://techno-fandom.org/~hobbit/cars/ev/
76•AnnikaL•4d ago•46 comments

Lies I was told about collaborative editing, Part 2: Why we don't use Yjs

https://www.moment.dev/blog/lies-i-was-told-pt-2
140•antics•3d ago•73 comments

Comparing Python Type Checkers: Typing Spec Conformance

https://pyrefly.org/blog/typing-conformance-comparison/
65•ocamoss•6h ago•22 comments

AirPods Max 2

https://www.apple.com/airpods-max/
84•ssijak•5h ago•150 comments

On The Need For Understanding

https://blog.information-superhighway.net/on-the-need-for-understanding
16•zdw•4d ago•4 comments

The bureaucracy blocking the chance at a cure

https://www.writingruxandrabio.com/p/the-bureaucracy-blocking-the-chance
33•item•1d ago•54 comments

Event Publisher enables event integration between Keycloak and OpenFGA

https://github.com/embesozzi/keycloak-openfga-event-publisher
19•mooreds•4h ago•4 comments

Human Organ Atlas

https://human-organ-atlas.esrf.fr/
34•giuliomagnifico•1d ago•3 comments

'Pokémon Go' players unknowingly trained delivery robots with 30B images

https://www.popsci.com/technology/pokemon-go-delivery-robots-crowdsourcing/
136•wslh•5h ago•74 comments
Open in hackernews

'Pokémon Go' players unknowingly trained delivery robots with 30B images

https://www.popsci.com/technology/pokemon-go-delivery-robots-crowdsourcing/
136•wslh•5h ago

Comments

LollipopYakuza•4h ago
Despite the lack of transparency, is this so bad? Players are being given a game in exchange for collectively building a database.
xnorswap•3h ago
It's the lack of transparency that is bad. PokemonGo did not make it clear it was taking (and uploading) pictures.

You could argue that "of course it must be for AR", but that isn't clear at all. The camera shows a live image before I take a photo, and I wouldn't expect a photo to be captured and sent if I didn't press the (virtual) shutter.

There are probably some cheap phones that do precisely that, and I'd be just as annoyed at them and raise the same concerns.

dawnerd•3h ago
I recall there being a pretty obvious notice when they first ask if you want to participate. Whether people read it is another thing.
pavon•2h ago
It isn't recording surreptitiously. The data was collected as part of an optional feature which is a very intentional process where you start a scan and then move around the object being scanned to get data from multiple angles, and then click to upload the data to Niantic. The uploading is called out specifically as a separate step (at least early on it was common for uploads to fail, so it had the option to save the scan to upload later when you had better signal). There is nothing secret about the fact that Niantic is collecting this data.

The lack of transparency is about how Niantic is using the data, selling it to third parties for purposes unrelated to the game. And I agree with the parent that this is a fair trade for a free game, especially since that part is optional, but more transparency would be better.

abroszka33•3h ago
I like Pokemon Go and play almost every day. I did this scan one time and then stopped. The rewards are not worth the hassle. I don't think many players are doing it. It's just very weird to stand somewhere and scan an object.

I also wouldn't say 'unknowingly trained', it's pretty obvious what it does, and I think the game even tells you that they want to understands how the POI looks like in 3D.

organsnyder•3h ago
My son showed me how he does these quests: he points the phone at the floor and just wiggles it back and forth.
abroszka33•3h ago
Haha :D Good tip, I will try that too.
FrustratedMonky•2h ago
exactly. that is why i doubt they will get actual navigable information out of it.
pohl•1h ago
To maintain that take, wouldn't you need to offer a plausible way that Niantic managed to train their Visual Positioning System using that data if the data was all bad?
deadbabe•1h ago
Your son is a bad data point.
Supermancho•32m ago
Bad for some goals, good for others.
ohyoutravel•2h ago
Same, I do it once in a great while. Give me a rare candy or rare candy XL per scan and you’ll find me jumping all over the neighborhood!
mikae1•1h ago
> I don't think many players are doing it.

Do we have to think? Apparently they amassed 30B images. :)

momoschili•25m ago
30B images isn't that much in the context of Pokemon Go playerbase of ~50 million (conservative estimate based on users today). That's about 600 images per person, in a game that has been out since 2016... that's pretty low adoption as the previous user said. I don't think the quest has been out since 2016, but considering a large fraction of users are basically daily users, it's still quite a small number of images.
tantalor•3h ago
> The massive crowdsourcing effort could use real-world to help robots deliver pizza.

Huh? Does popsci not have copy editors?

Aboutplants•3h ago
At what point will we have people transmit their car dash cams along with GPS information in order to generate more data? I’m actually surprised this hasn’t happened yet with self driving car manufacturers needing more and more data
jerlam•3h ago
Great question. A "Ring Dashcam" with a mobile connection would win customers based on name recognition alone.

Not a lot of big companies in the dashcam market, there are a lot of alphabet companies and some small players like Vantrue. The only company with broader recognition is Garmin and it feels like a weird side gig for them.

chaps•3h ago
This.... absolutely already happens. It's trivial and cheap to purchase the three meter, three second resolution data of millions of vehicles.
dawnerd•3h ago
Tesla does it and clearly it’s not all that useful in reality.
KaiserPro•2h ago
Thats because Tesla is useless, not because the data isn't valuable.

Tesla has explicitly ruled out using "HD maps" for autonomous vehicles. This means that all the data they have is going to not building maps, but building scenarios for testing its self driving models.

If you look at Wayve, they are building nerf maps to allow them to create scenarios for edge cases. all of that comes from the gathered data.

If you want to build visual navigation systems, you need lots of fresh data from all over. Seeding it with the data that naintic has is useful, but a lot of that data is out of date so not that useful anymore.

rangestransform•1h ago
Mobileye builds their maps like this
tantalor•3h ago
> crowdsourced data, seemingly collected for one purpose

> Whether players knew it or not, those scans were creating 3D models of the real world

Kind of shitty reporting. Did users know about this data collection or not? Was it not disclosed?

jeroenhd•3h ago
The privacy policy was just a generic corporate "we may collect some information to improve a service" crap.

Technically, lawyers will argue that users had to opportunity to inform themselves.

Practically, nobody knew.

organsnyder•3h ago
The quests themselves are prominently labeled "AR mapping". You don't need to go into the privacy policy to know what they are.
pavon•2h ago
It is not at all clear that the mapping is for purposes other than the AR features in the game itself though. In fact Niantic advertised the scanning field research as helping them make richer experience at PokeStops (which they did).

Niantic was much more upfront about this with Ingress, so people who know the company's history will likely guess that Pokemon Go is serving the same purpose, but for someone coming into the game without that background, there is nothing in the game itself that indicates that data is being collected for other commercial purpose.

rvnx•3h ago
Looks like teenagers are going to have fun playing Pokemon Go, and now have faster food deliveries.

It's useful to map the world, this is what Google / Baidu / Yandex Maps are doing too.

johannes1234321•3h ago
It is indeed useful.

The question is how one stands on the monopolistic collection by a commercial entity.

I personally don't mind to share GPS traces and other data with i.e. open streetmap, as I directly benefit from the data as well and it's more or less equal between different entities.

I try not to give too much to Google and similar companies as this increases their competitive advantage, while my benefit is small.

serf•3h ago
wasnt this sort of obvious to anyone familiar with Niantic?
DANmode•3h ago
“What’s Niantic?”

looks back down at phone

Aurornis•3h ago
My friend plays Pokémon Go for hours every day while walking his dog. I asked him about this and now we’re both confused. The in game scanning is only for major landmarks in the game. Even in his dense city these landmarks are few and far between. The world model would only have sparse information in the area immediately surrounding these landmarks.

I don’t know if there’s much substance to the delivery robot story. This could be a journalist trying to make the story relatable.

tim333•4m ago
I was thinking the 'scan a pokestop' data would be very patchy but I guess they also have images from people catching pokemon in AR mode?
RC_ITR•3h ago
I'm not positive this was a secret (See: Reddit post about it from 2018):

https://www.reddit.com/r/TheSilphRoad/comments/8i7byi/pokemo...

Frieren•3h ago
Big corporations have found the way to make us work for free in their own terms. The balance of power between the working class and capital is totally broken.

And for me it is not just the lack of transparency. It is the power balance. I should not need to work for free, give my data, and god knows what to play a game. I should not be living knowing that I am being exploited at each interaction with software. Transparency is good, but not enough. "Click here to accept" and thousands of lines of legalese do not create a fair society.

gjsman-1000•3h ago
> I should not need to work for free, give my data, and god knows what to play a game.

The game is free, with doing so being the price. If you don't like that price, you can always pay $80 for a traditional Pokemon game.

As such, I don't get the handwringing. There is no such thing as a free lunch and never will be.

ses1984•3h ago
Is there an $80 Pokémon game where walking outside is a core mechanic and that facilitates interaction with a huge network of users?
Brainspackle•3h ago
Take a walk while you play your switch
collingreen•2h ago
"We've got pokemon go at home!"
gs17•36m ago
A long time ago they had the games that came with a "Pokéwalker", which was a pedometer that acted as a sort of mini-game, but that's the closest they got to a mainstream game where you have to get off the couch. It almost meets your specification (well, did, I'm sure the internet part is offline so you're not connected anymore), but it's obviously not exactly what you meant.
throwaway27448•2h ago
The americans who believed anti-communist propaganda might have been the dumbest generation in history: they gave up a decent democracy with actual democratic say in how society is run in order to fear the world comfortably from home.
FrustratedMonky•2h ago
For Maga, democracy is too socialist.

LOL: Remember when they literally said the Pope wasn't Christian enough.

FrustratedMonky•1h ago
Maga, all butt hurt with the slow, creeping realization, that they are the baddies.

Before: "Freeeeeeddommm of Speech".

Now: "News outlets must follow admin talking points or be hung for treason" We'll solve that buy just buying them out.

penguin_booze•2h ago
You reckon subsequent generations improved? Hint: look around and see what's happening, and how that came about.
charcircuit•2h ago
You don't need to work and if you do you get rewarded in the game. Money is not the only motivating factor for people. Even something like keeping Google Map up to date can bring value to people from helping others. Helping others is not zero sum. Just because a company benefits from helping others that doesn't mean it's bad.
teeray•2h ago
It’s the lack of transparency that is the problem. There should be a clear labor exchange disclaimer: “we are asking you to do X minutes of AI training for one unit of in-game reward.” What people take issue with is Tom Sawyer tricking people into whitewashing a fence.
mapkkk•1h ago
You're right in that money is not the only motivator for people. I would also argue that if you told them the _real_ reason, aka your own actual motivation behind the offer, the number of people who would actually be "playing" would be much lower.

I would be motivated to collect free data if it meant I was helping save lives, with that help not being behind a paywall.

I would be motivated to play a free game with ads just for the fun of it.

I would not be motivated to play a free game just for the fun of it if my playing of the game was furthering some faceless corporation's profit motives.

In fact, in that last scenario, I would feel tricked, and it would take a non-trivial amount of money for me to not feel that way.

BoorishBears•3h ago
I don't think this is the worst thing trained.

Niantic builds massive geospatial models that can localize and reconstruct views: https://www.nianticspatial.com/

Extremely detailed mappings of CONUS with spatial intelligence already built around it, and we let the company get sold to Saudi government last year.

Brosper•3h ago
I think that only the author of this post didn't know that. Everybody know that Niantic is a big data company.
ragebol•3h ago
Everyone in a very specific bubble
jsbisviewtiful•2h ago
Even without looking it up to know for sure it was pretty obvious and could be inferred by anyone playing the game. Especially the scanning, which was painfully obvious to be a data collection method.
tim333•52m ago
I didn't know, although I play Pokemon Go and the Wikipedia page for them doesn't say big data although it mentions "...been developing for years: the Niantic Real World Platform." as mentioned in the article although it sounds a bit of a work in progress. They make a lot of money as a games company.
atemerev•2h ago
Pizza delivery robot, or a live grenade delivery robot, depending on the country and the dataset buyer.
FrustratedMonky•2h ago
Those pokestop scans are trash. I can't believe they will get enough detailed information out of them to allow navigation by robots.
KaiserPro•2h ago
Niantic are a number of people who are doing this. Its not that clear from the article, but niantic spatial are using the images captured from users to create a 3d model of "THE WORLD" or where people play pokemon go.

They have then fed that data into a more modern version of colmap (https://github.com/colmap/colmap) to create a point cloud. Then the engineering to make sure that point cloud is aligned accurately and automatically.

Once you have that point cloud aligned to the world, all you need is another image with some overlapping feature. Using simple trigonometry you can work out where the camera is from one picture

This is largely trivial to do for a few 100 sqaure meters. the hard part is doing it fast in at the city scale. Extracting a few thousand features from an image and then matching them against >billion other points is hard to do quickly, without some optimisations.

The thing that is not mentioned here is that data freshness is actually more important. Building change (advertising hoardings, paint jobs, logo changes, building remodelled etc) so the data goes stale. Its actually not that expensive anymore to just send your own people to scan areas. (A number of startups pre 2020 did it, mapillary provides a platform for it, although now owned by facebook)

The robots will be feeding that data back in to the map. the special sauce is updating the map without infringing patents, and doing it efficiently.

5-•2h ago
see this 2007 talk: https://www.ted.com/talks/blaise_aguera_y_arcas_how_photosyn...

i remember this being available in google maps in 2008 or so. fun technology!

vel0city•2h ago
I remember playing with Photosynth on my Windows Phone. Good times.
sublinear•2h ago
I don't think anyone actually cares about this in principle. This is more of a product and marketing problem than a legal or moral one.

What people dislike is noticing the strings attached so distastefully. I can't think of any fads or pastimes where there aren't any, but the benefits of the activity offered should outweigh the cost.

In that sense, Pokémon Go was a bad deal. I still don't get what was ever in it for the player.

JakeStone•1h ago
Not unexpected, but it looks the oldest kid, Ingress, is being ignored again. IIRC, there was some badge you could earn by doing a number of those scans.

Or is Ingress even still around?

pchew•1h ago
They were(are?) the same backend, same world maps, same POIs. Maybe they diversified at some point but at launch the Gyms were 1 to 1 with Ingress portals in my city.

It is interesting that the 'non-gaming' division of the split kept Ingress.

rigrassm•44m ago
The OG was alive and kicking when I hopped back on a year and a half ago. No where near what it used to have as far as active players go but in my big city area there are still lots of active OGs and new people hopping on.
poontunia•1h ago
And we’re all training ai right now with our comments. Even the bots here.
elictronic•55m ago
Millions of software devs unknowingly trained LLMs to start replacing their jobs.

PUSH your code to fit to find out more.

Molitor5901•46m ago
Does anyone remember Ingress? I always wondered what it was we were training by playing that game.
bitxbitxbitcoin•43m ago
Considering that Niantic was behind both ingress and pokemon go, the answer is all of this.
rigrassm•31m ago
Niantic has been doing this for a long time starting with Ingress. I've maybe done a handful of scans in PoGo but as others have mentioned the rewards were just not worth the trouble. The rewards for doing it in Ingress were much better (at least back in the day).

I'm more split on my feelings towards it these days given our current political/social climate but part of me still thinks the idea of mapping the real world in great detail is a worthy endeavor if it can be done "right". I'd probably be more inclined to support it if they would release the data or make it publicly accessible for others to use but it being tied to the whims of a corporation (even one that's been less shitty than most) makes it hard to get behind.

gradientsrneat•25m ago
Nintendo's brand means nothing.
bethekidyouwant•6m ago
Pretty sure you take a video when you’re doing this task so the images are extra extracted from the video?