AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

CJEU: Social networks are the 'publishers' of algorithmically-altered feeds

CJEU ruling: EU member states may require age verification for porn and ban the rebroadcast of traffic-cop information; the Court also says a website that curates content via algorithms can be liable for the content it presents.

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The history of butterfly swimming

Butterfly originated in the 1930s as a faster variant of breaststroke. Henry Myers first used butterfly arms for a full length in 1933; David Armbruster developed the dolphin kick, popularized by Jack Sieg in 1935. It became a separate stroke when FINA codified it in 1952. It debuted at the Olympics in 1956 (men’s 200m, women’s 100m); in 1968 the 100m and 200m events were added for both genders. A 50m butterfly exists at World/continental levels. Notable English Olympic medallists: Phil Hubble (1980, 200m silver), Andy Jameson (1988, 100m bronze), Steve Parry (2004, 200m bronze).

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Google Chrome's Next Update Will Mark the End of Popular Ad Blockers

Google Chrome is dropping Manifest V2 support, ending legacy ad blockers such as uBlock Origin. A Chromium commit removes the MV2-disabled flag; MV2 extensions are no longer allowed in any Chrome version. Chrome 150 will remove the flag, with remaining MV2 bits gone in v151. Other Chromium-based browsers (Edge, Opera) likely to follow. The move cites complexity, tech debt, and security risks, with MV2 bugs noted. Expect impact on ad blockers; some users may shift to Firefox or Brave, which has its own filtering engine.

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Subquadratic – Introducing SubQ 1.1 Small

Subquadratic announces SubQ 1.1 Small, the second Subquadratic Sparse Attention (SSA) model, for long-context reasoning over entire artifacts. It delivers near-perfect retrieval up to 12M tokens with huge compute savings—about 64.5x less compute than dense attention and 56x faster than FlashAttention-2 at 1M tokens—while preserving general reasoning across knowledge, coding, and enterprise tasks. Evaluations (NIAH, RULER, GPQA Diamond, LiveCodeBench, etc.) show strong retrieval and competitive performance. Training used long-context pretraining (~1T tokens) and staged context extensions. Deployment to design partners now, broader rollout by year-end.

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Fable ban was never about a jailbreak

TechCrunch reports that a U.S. Commerce Department export-control letter, not an AI jailbreak, forced Anthropic to pull Fable 5 and Mythos 5 offline, barring non-Americans from access. Anthropic says the letter lacks specifics and cites a guardrail bypass, but experts argue the order is misguided, dangerous to cybersecurity research, and signals government overreach. The episode fuels concerns about trust in American AI, potential politicization, and a precedent that authorities can shut down software. Some call for revoking the directive; others question the administration’s reasons and broader impact.

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Running local models is good now

Local models are finally good. After trying Mistral, Gemma, Qwen, etc., on a 2022 M2 Mac with 64GB RAM, I perform agentic coding locally with Gemma-4 via LM Studio at roughly 75% the speed/accuracy of frontier models. I’ve refactored Python code, linted modules, proofread posts, bootstrapped a two-tower recommender, and built an ArXiv-topic app. Setup uses Docker, Pi as agent harness, LM Studio as the endpoint; llama.cpp is also an option. Pros: introspection and model comparison; cons: slower, small context windows, not production-ready yet.

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Google Chrome update will close the door on ad blockers

Google Chrome’s Move to Manifest V3 ends many ad blockers by removing MV2 support; Chrome 150 will drop the MV2 workaround flag, and Chrome 151 will remove remaining MV2 leftovers. MV2 extensions, including popular blockers like uBlock Origin, will no longer be allowed in any supported Chrome version, and other Chromium-based browsers (Edge, Opera) may follow. The change aims to boost security and privacy but reduces ad-blocking capabilities.

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Show HN: Hackers for Granny (defense against industrialized elder fraud)

Industrialized elder fraud costs billions, with criminals using voice cloning, real-time deepfakes, remote-access tools, and psychology to exploit lonely seniors. The manifesto calls researchers and developers to act: build scalable, evidence-backed defenses, and help prosecutions by sharing telemetry. It highlights five attack patterns that account for 90% of elder-tech fraud. It introduces Granny Kate, a consent-based desktop app that detects and disrupts these attacks in real time; a seven-day demo is available (Store version identical). The goal: industrialize defense through community effort, not vigilante hacking.

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I Fired Google

Karen Bertelsen describes how Google Home’s Gemini update ruined a once-simple, useful gadget. It now warns for medical questions, gives long, contextual explanations, and withholds direct facts (e.g., Geena Davis’s age). Features like song identification disappeared, driving her to unplug Google Home and buy an Alexa. She argues tech progress has simplified nothing and made devices harder to use, calling it Enshittification of products, and advocates quicker, more direct answers over bureaucracy.

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Is Fable 5 Back?

Claude Fable 5 is currently unavailable due to a U.S. export-control directive issued June 12, 2026. There is no announced return date; Anthropic is working to restore access. The site checks Anthropic's API every minute and will switch to 'Yes' and allow email notifications as soon as Fable 5 responds again. Fable 5, Anthropic's most capable Claude model, and its sibling Mythos were suspended; the page is not affiliated with Anthropic. As of June 16, 1:59 PM, Fable 5 remains unavailable.

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'Wow, it really worked ': 70s TV show causing worldwide panic today

Alternative 3, Anglia Television’s 1977 Science Report, was a spoof about scientists vanishing to advance a space-based elite Mars colony. Created by David Ambrose and hosted by Tim Brinton with a Brian Eno score and fake NASA footage, it aired on June 20 (not April Fool’s Day) and many viewers took it as fact. A 1978 Leslie Watkins book expanded the hoax, helping seed modern conspiracy culture around elite plots and government deception. The piece illuminates how convincing fictions can shape belief and influence today’s disinformation landscape.

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An interview with an Apple emoji designer

Ollie Wagner, one of Apple’s first emoji designers, discusses designing the original Apple emoji set as an intern on Apple’s Human Interface team in 2008. He continued the project alongside Angela Guzman and Raymond Sepulveda, using a SoftBank spreadsheet as the reference and mapping it 1:1 to SoftBank’s set while omitting a few risqué icons. Emoji were hand-drawn in Photoshop to fit Apple’s style, then reviewed by SoftBank and final approval by Steve Jobs. Wagner designed over 300 emoji, later joined Apple full-time and worked on the original iPad; today he’s founder of YAP Studios.

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Unicorn – The Ultimate CPU Emulator

Unicorn Engine is a lightweight, GPLv2 CPU-emulator framework that runs on Windows and Unix-like systems (macOS, Linux, Android, BSDs, Solaris) and supports multiple architectures (ARM, ARM64, x86/x86-64, MIPS, PowerPC, RISCV, S390x, SPARC, TriCore, m68k). It offers a pure-C core with architecture-neutral API and bindings to many languages, built for high performance via JIT and thread-safety. Based on QEMU but expanded, Unicorn has evolved from v1.0 to Unicorn2 (2.x), adding architectures and APIs; versions 2.0.0/2.0.1 released in 2022. Won BlackHat 2015 talk, and Alibaba Cloud Asian Star 2022 award.

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Color Photos of Stalin-Era Soviet Union Taken by a US Diplomat

Martin Manhoff, an American diplomat in Moscow during the 1950s, kept a diary and color photographs that document daily life in the Stalin‑era Soviet Union. Accused of espionage, he and his family were deported in 1954. A historian, Douglas Smith, uncovered thousands of Manhoff images from Moscow, Leningrad, Yalta and the Trans‑Siberian Railroad, offering a personal counterpoint to official narratives: scarce goods, pervasive surveillance, and fleeting human warmth amid state control and propaganda. The archive, spanning May Day 1953 scenes to later Khrushchev thaw elements, provides a rare window into U.S.–Soviet Cold War history.

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Russian artist and Putin critic shot dead in Poland

Poland's police are investigating the execution-style killing of Russian artist and Putin critic Robert Kuzovkov, known as Semyon Skrepetsky, in Biała Podlaska, near the Belarus border. The 44-year-old was shot five times in a city car park close to the Belarusian consulate. A gunman approached, fired twice, then three more shots; five shell casings and a Geco 9mm Luger bullet were recovered. An autopsy is planned. Two Belarusian men (33 and 37) were detained near the consulate; their role is under investigation. Kuzovkov moved to the city in 2021 and was known for caricatures of Putin and Lukashenko.

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SpaceX Is Buying Cursor

SpaceX to acquire AI coding start-up Cursor (Anysphere) for $60bn in SpaceX stock, to close by September. The deal follows SpaceX’s Nasdaq IPO, valuing the company at over $2 trillion. Cursor’s AI coding agent is used by Stripe, Adobe and Nvidia; SpaceX plans to pair it with its Colossus supercomputer to push its xAI efforts and Grok. SpaceX remains unprofitable, with heavy AI/infrastructure spending; its core business is rockets and Starlink, and the IPO boosted Elon Musk’s wealth.

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Hans Schulz – The father of the VEF Minox lens?

Hans Schulz is presented as the likely mind behind the Minostigmat, the Riga Minox lens that made subminiature photography viable. Faced with embedding a sharp lens in an 8×11 mm frame, Schulz designed a three-element Cooke triplet (15 mm focal length, fixed f/3.5) that corrected key aberrations without an aperture. The Minostigmat enabled sharp enlargements to 13×18 cm, defining the Minox’s photographic potential. The article traces Schulz’s Berlin-Goerz connections, his 1940 "Light Through Glass" treatment of optics, and details the grueling, hand-calculated lens design process, which reportedly took months with assistants. Schulz died 1968.

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Correlated randomness in Slay the Spire 2

Blog explains correlated RNG in Slay the Spire 2 due to linear System.Random usage across many RNG streams, causing first-rolls to predict others. Presents distributions for curses (Neow's Bones), Large/Small Capsule, transforms (Leafy Poultice, Hefty Tablet), Doll Room, Trash Heap, potion drops, and first combat gold; shows act-specific biases (Underdocks vs Overgrowth) and even predicts first orb hits and ancient options. Argues for fix: replace with nonlinear PRNG (e.g., PCG32 or counter-based) and potentially changing save-state RNG handling; notes multiplayer uses Steam ID offset. Concludes CRNG should be fixed.

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SpaceX to buy Cursor AI coding agent operator Anysphere for $60B

Could not summarize article.

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Electrifying the Cow Path

The article argues that simply dropping AI agents into existing workflows speeds up single steps but leaves the system bottlenecked by organization. The electric-motor analogy shows that replacing the power source without redesigning the plant yields limited gains; the real leap is redesigning the layout around workflow. The bottleneck shifts to judgment, approvals, and handoffs, not execution. The recommendation is to locate judgment in a dedicated, certifiable space, reuse it across tasks, and let agents handle the repeatable steps. Encourage systemic redesign, not just automation of old processes.

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