Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | jruohonen's commentslogin

W. R. Stevens is an all-time favorite of mine.

" Undoubtable, there will be pockets of humanity still, that are set up with the express intent of keeping bots and other autonomous malicious actors at bay, like a lively small village in the centre of a dangerous jungle, with big walls and vigilant guards."

"Except that nobody cares anymore."

:-(



Good tracking; Red Hat, GitHub, OpenAI, ...

"Many of the processes that we have around software engineering practice are based on the assumption that generating software is expensive."

Or was it maintenance?


> Similar to how I like to look at scam/phishing emails to see how they work, I'm interested in seeing how sophisticated these are/are not.

https://edmo.eu/publications/ai-political-influencers-the-ne...


Are there any links to any of these Russian doppelganger propaganda sites? That seemed to just be a story about "influencers" and their AI slop.

They were largely taken down after Biden-admin actions in 2024 -- a contemporaneous story about some:

https://dfrlab.org/2024/09/18/doppelganger-us-election/

With a few preserved/archived stories e.g. from FoxNews.top:

https://web.archive.org/web/20230922135430/https:/www.fox-ne...


It is the world wide web so yes there should be plenty of links to those, but I do not have them.

I did do some searching and any link I found was already dead (hence me asking here!), so it's not really helpful to say "there should be plenty of links".

They set up new ones, don't worry. And the propaganda is largely on brain rotting social media like tiktok and twitterx.

Disinformation moved from page rank to the "feed" in 2018 when Douyin bought (read: acquired copyright they originally stole) Musically and rebranded to TikTok. Why does no one remember any of this? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fake_news_websites_in_the_Unit...

> ... a second level of human beings responsible for reviewing, auditing, packaging, and customizing those hacker-generated upstreams for the benefit of their users.

> The real solution (for Linux too) is a paid package curation service. Or really, a small handful of them competing on price, speed, reliability.

That was also what I was thinking aloud a moment ago. And there would be a business opportunity, too. Perhaps not like RHEL et al. full-blown stuff per se, but say smaller scale guarantees with different pricing; web, AI, scientific computing, and whatnot. At the pace things are progressing, I'd guess you might even get desktop etc. users on board (for nominal pricing).


Indeed, my sentiment also, which I posted elsewhere:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48358080


And the accompanying:

https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.29140

Some good takes on new (and old) ideas to consider.

I don't know what should or could be done, but maybe people will revert back to using only distribution-shipped packages. There was a good argument from Ubuntu people about this a while back:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47585172


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: