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Since Linux 6.9, LUKS suspend stopped wiping disk-encryption keys from memory

https://mathstodon.xyz/@iblech/116769502749142438
101•IngoBlechschmid•1h ago•20 comments

Launch HN: Manufact (YC S25) – MCP Cloud

https://manufact.com
45•pzullo•1h ago•23 comments

Android Developer Verification: Threat masquerading as protection

https://f-droid.org/2026/07/01/adv-malware.html
1284•drewfax•13h ago•531 comments

How to ask for help from people who don't know you

https://pradyuprasad.com/writings/how-to-ask-for-help/
85•FigurativeVoid•3h ago•7 comments

AI can't be listed as inventor on patent applications, Japan's top court rules

https://japannews.yomiuri.co.jp/science-nature/technology/20260306-314930/
165•mushstory•2h ago•63 comments

Show HN: Mail Memories – A desktop app to rescue photos from Gmail

https://mailmemories.com
65•ltiger•2h ago•18 comments

PeerTube is a free, decentralized and federated video platform

https://github.com/Chocobozzz/PeerTube
90•doener•5h ago•9 comments

Is One Layer Enough? A Single Transformer Layer Matches Full-Parameter RL Train

https://arxiv.org/abs/2607.01232
75•tcp_handshaker•4h ago•15 comments

German button maker searched rivers of American Midwest for valuable shells

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smithsonian-institution/how-one-german-button-maker-searched-the-r...
61•bookofjoe•4d ago•17 comments

Show HN: CLI tool for detecting non-exact code duplication with embedding models

https://github.com/rafal-qa/slopo
23•rkochanowski•2h ago•5 comments

Kimi K2.7 Code is generally available in GitHub Copilot

https://github.blog/changelog/2026-07-01-kimi-k2-7-is-now-available-in-github-copilot/
314•unliftedq•12h ago•131 comments

The Egg Bandits Made a Thousand Times the Fine They Just Paid for Price Fixing

https://www.thebignewsletter.com/p/crime-pays-the-egg-bandits-made-a
134•toomuchtodo•3h ago•38 comments

Hazel (YC W24) Is Hiring for Our Largest Government Contract

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/hazel-2/jobs/3epPWgu-full-stack-engineer-ts-sci
1•augustschen•3h ago

The primary purpose of code review is to find code that will be hard to maintain

https://mathstodon.xyz/@mjd/115096720350507897
187•ColinWright•4h ago•113 comments

The fall of the theorem economy

https://davidbessis.substack.com/p/the-fall-of-the-theorem-economy
174•varjag•8h ago•78 comments

Oomwoo, an open-source robot vacuum you build yourself

https://makerspet.com/blog/building-an-open-source-robot-vacuum-meet-oomwoo/
426•devicelimit•15h ago•83 comments

Show HN: A graph paper generator that renders vector PDFs in the browser

https://freegraphpaper.net/
30•lam_hg94•3h ago•7 comments

ZCode – Harness for GLM-5.2

https://zcode.z.ai/en
482•chvid•18h ago•321 comments

Show HN: Claudoro, Pomodoro timer embedded in the Claude Code statusline

https://github.com/emson/claudoro
26•emson•1d ago•20 comments

CursorBench 3.1

https://cursor.com/evals
118•handfuloflight•11h ago•69 comments

Vite+ Beta

https://voidzero.dev/posts/announcing-vite-plus-beta
172•Erenay09•5h ago•100 comments

Comparing Fable and 10 other LLMs on refactoring a LangGraph god node

https://wtf.korridzy.com/twilight-of-the-gods/
26•Korridzy•3h ago•8 comments

WinPE as a stateless harness for Windows driver testing and fuzzing

https://bednars.me/blog/winpe-harness
49•piotrbednarsalt•3d ago•3 comments

Show HN: ZkGolf

https://zk.golf/
11•rot256•53m ago•1 comments

Germany’s Infineon opens major chip plant as EU seeks tech autonomy

https://www.rfi.fr/en/international-news/20260702-germany-s-infineon-opens-major-chip-plant-as-eu...
99•giuliomagnifico•3h ago•26 comments

Show HN: ZeroFS – A log-structured filesystem for S3

https://www.zerofs.net/
75•Eikon•2h ago•36 comments

Natural history on canvas: Brueghel knew about bird-eating noctule bats

https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2536525123
4•benbreen•20h ago•0 comments

Senior SWE-Bench: open-source benchmark that assesses agents as senior engineers

https://senior-swe-bench.snorkel.ai/
128•matt_d•13h ago•94 comments

Spain Orders Blacklist of Palantir from Public and Private Companies

https://clashreport.com/world/articles/spain-orders-blacklist-of-us-tech-giant-palantir-from-publ...
29•mgh2•1h ago•2 comments

Asymmetric Quantization: Near-Lossless Retrieval with 97% Storage Reduction

https://www.mixedbread.com/blog/asymmetric-quant
85•breadislove•2d ago•31 comments
Open in hackernews

The Egg Bandits Made a Thousand Times the Fine They Just Paid for Price Fixing

https://www.thebignewsletter.com/p/crime-pays-the-egg-bandits-made-a
133•toomuchtodo•3h ago

Comments

toomuchtodo•3h ago
Related:

Egg Libor Was Also Manipulated - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48756256 - July 2026

Justice Department Requires Egg Producers to End Coordinated Benchmark Manipulation that Artificially Inflated Prices Across the Country - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48734081 - July 2026

pstuart•2h ago
That'll show em! (that they should continue with the price fixing).

I look forward to the day when we no longer have a pro-corruption government.

cyanydeez•2h ago
win/wind: get caught, pay minor tax; dont get caught, get to keep minor tax
toomuchtodo•1h ago
If you want more aggressive anti trust enforcement, voters must vote better, for candidates and administrations that will aggressively enforce.
readthenotes1•1h ago
"naked conspiracy to manipulate the price of eggs from 2022-2025. "

Who was in charge during this time period?

jstanley•1h ago
2 consecutive pro-corruption governments
wat10000•57m ago
Surely the relevant question is who was in charge when the punishment was decided, not who was in charge when the misbehavior occurred.
mghackerlady•51m ago
not the one in charge of punishing this behaviour
mrguyorama•48m ago
People always overlook how crappy our courts are.

They have been absurdly pro corporate for decades. They will bend over backwards to accept an absurd legal arguments from corporate attorneys, yet they never seem to have that level of credulity for people like you and me.

That famous McDonalds hot coffee case, McDonalds had caused serious injuries to hundreds of people previously and demonstrated serious negligence and a willing disregard for the safety of their customers and the courts, and yet when the jury came back with a couple million dollars in punitive damages, the judge still massively reduced that penalty!

We have to push for courts that don't treat corporations with white gloves.

saghm•
onetimeusename•49m ago
Do you have any evidence the settlement terms are corrupt? There were 17 states involved. Many of those states have governors that are not in the same party as the president. https://apnews.com/article/egg-prices-collusion-settlement-d...
TimorousBestie•39m ago
It’s not only Republicans getting contributions from Big Egg.
throw10920•16m ago
xkcd (2130) continues to be unreasonably poignant, as usual.
Taronar•59m ago
Things like this mainly occur in markets with little competition, killing of small business causes issues like this. Much of our grievances are caused by our high level of market concentration.
abeppu•45m ago
And notably, we used to have a somewhat progressive corporate income tax which, at least on paper, provided a quantitative disincentive against too much consolidation. Sometimes the merger of A and B would pay a higher rate than A and B separately. And we gave that mechanism up.
plagiarist•31m ago
An assumption required to make capitalism work efficiently is that customers have meaningful choices. Trustbusting is one of the important roles of the government, if it were functional.
MarkusQ•53m ago
Reminds me of the Egg Greed Graph.

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/HFa2bQlWcAARYNB.jpg

Why is it people have such a hard time understanding that this is what we want markets to do? If there is a scarcity of some resource, the prices rise and this motivates producers to produce more and consumers to consume less, until an equilibrium is found. On net, this means that we can have more of what we want for less effort over time. Yes, the people doing this profit from it. That's why they do it.

vikingerik•48m ago
Consumers don't want to understand it because they don't want to consume less.
smokefoot•38m ago
I mean no. The LIBOR analogy is appropriate. Large, long-term egg supply contracts are fixed to an index and that index was manipulated. That's criminal conspiracy and price fixing, not just a liquid market.

That's notably different from say the current scrum for HBM where the demand truly came as a surprise and scarce supply gets bid up.

Micron's windfall is justified and natural as these things go. The egg windfall was manufactured and criminal.

treis•12m ago
LIBOR didn't triple the rate. I don't doubt that they screwed around at the margins but the extreme volatility in egg prices were predominantly caused by the underlying economic factors.
miyoji•40m ago
josefritzishere•43m ago
Crime is legal now if you can get rich fast enough.
declan_roberts•34m ago
We really need to bring back corporal punishment, both for petty crimes and white collar crimes. The prison sentences don't make sense for the petty crimes, and the fines don't make sense for the white collar crimes.

We need legalize public caning and the stocks.

Henchman21•19m ago
Along with this we need the revocation of corporate charters and the liquidation of all assets belonging to the owners of any corp that is dissolved in this manner. The penalty for fucking over the public in general should be a lifetime of poverty.
devilbunny•17m ago
The owners of corporations are mostly pension funds and the like.
mlsu•8m ago
Arguably that is worse. If a criminal misuses his own resources to commit crimes and then you take that away from them, it only affects him.

The companies should be liquidated still. That would put the incentives in the correct order.

john_strinlai•7m ago
>the fines don't make sense for the white collar crimes.

why do we need to jump to caning instead of increasing the fines to something more than an operating expense?

in this case, if the fine was 1000x the profits instead of the other way around, the problem would be solved, right?

tancop
cucumber3732842•30m ago
> Basically, consolidation had created concentrated power, and the shock of <whatever> let them exploit it.

Once you see this pattern, you see it everywhere.

>While most normal people at the time thought someone was likely scamming them, that is not the message you heard from the industry, elite media, or economists. Throughout the alleged conspiracy, industry executives and analysts were saying that there was nothing to see except a supply shock of a disease killing lots of hens

The idea that something more nefarious than the bird flue was going on was very unpopular on HN at the time

Varelion•21m ago
The United Monopolies of America
pphysch•9m ago
The Associated Monopolies of America.
xgulfie•20m ago
Same thing keeps happening with DRAM, bread, electricity...
mannanj•19m ago
So isn't this how all major US capitalist companies function now? They look at unethical behavior and fines as a cost-benefits equation. Hardly new that when people make lots of money from something, they pay off your leaders to let them off with a small fine.
croes•14m ago
Business as usual.

BP, Shell etc. make more profit from ignoring safety and environmental standards than they have to pay in fines for oil spills.

Same is true for FB & Co.

How about the possibility of a death penalty for companies like for people because companies are people, aren’t they?

jklinger410•5m ago
It's so fun how corporations are protected from individual liability but also their money is treated a speech.
16m ago
> That famous McDonalds hot coffee case, McDonalds had caused serious injuries to hundreds of people previously and demonstrated serious negligence and a willing disregard for the safety of their customers and the courts, and yet when the jury came back with a couple million dollars in punitive damages, the judge still massively reduced that penalty!

And then in the aftermath of that, the media turned the most well-known victim into a punchline and a oft-cited example of absurd litigation by people who don't know any better.

Collusion is not a market force and is actually highly illegal and corrupting of markets, so this doesn't seem relevant at all.
SpicyLemonZest•34m ago
As the article says, people have a hard time understanding it because it turned out not to be what's happening. I was on the other side of the debate, I thought it was absurd, but it turns out egg company executives really were sending each other messages saying "let's manipulate the price upwards so that we can make more money".
Henchman21•21m ago
Greed isn’t “forgotten” its reined in by regulation.
oersted•1m ago
The chart is meant to show how absurd the conspiracy theory is, but it turns out it’s literally what happened this time around at least. Well they didn’t forget their greed of course, they just temporarily lost the ability to exercise it.
•
5m ago
we dont need new punishments, the system is just backwards. for things like shoplifting and vandalism it should be double or triple damages with no prison. corporate fraud, cartels, pollution, big time tax evasion has to come with 20+ year sentences and fines based on your income like a traffic violation in norway. flat fines just dont work when the criminal is rich.

in general we should be a lot more strict on sexual crimes (sa, trafficking, child abuse but not voluntary prostitution) and white collar/economic ones including wage theft, but less strict on drugs and property. drug possession and non commercial digital piracy should be decriminalized.

violent crimes are mostly in the right place, the big problem there is racist prosecutors and ineffective anti gang programs not the laws themselves but we need to remove death penalty/life without parole everywhere they still exist.

the point is we need a rebalance not a whole new untested mechanic.