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AI Submissions for Fri Feb 06 2026

Monty: A minimal, secure Python interpreter written in Rust for use by AI

Submission URL | 273 points | by dmpetrov | 145 comments

Monty: a minimal, secure Python interpreter for AI agents (by Pydantic)

What it is

  • A tiny Python interpreter written in Rust designed to run LLM-generated code safely and fast, embedded in agents—without containers or CPython.
  • Experimental, MIT-licensed, already drawing strong interest on GitHub.

Why it matters

  • Latency: claims sub–1 microsecond startup from code to result, avoiding the 100ms+ overhead of containerized sandboxes.
  • Safety by default: no filesystem, env vars, or network; all I/O is only via explicitly allowed host functions.
  • Deterministic tool use: snapshot/resume at external function boundaries lets you store interpreter state and continue later—useful for long-running or stateful agent workflows.
  • Type safety: supports modern Python type hints and bundles type checking (“ty”) in a single binary.

Key features

  • Runs a curated subset of Python suitable for agent logic.
  • Host function bridging (sync/async), with stdout/stderr capture.
  • Resource limits: enforces memory, allocations, stack depth, and execution time.
  • Embeddable from Rust, Python, or JavaScript; no CPython dependency.
  • Performance claims: roughly in the ballpark of CPython (from ~5x faster to ~5x slower depending on workload).

Notable limitations (by design)

  • Minimal standard library (only sys, typing, asyncio; dataclasses/json “soon”).
  • No third‑party Python packages.
  • No class definitions or match statements yet (both “coming soon”).
  • Purpose-built for running agent code, not general Python apps.

Ecosystem and intent

  • Aims to power “code-as-tools” agent patterns seen in Cloudflare Codemode, Anthropic’s programmatic tool calling/MCP, and Hugging Face Smol Agents.
  • Planned to back Pydantic AI’s codemode soon.

Quick take Monty trades breadth for speed and safety: it’s a lean, typed, embeddable Python for agents that need tight control and ultra-low latency. If your agent architecture favors emitting small Python snippets over invoking a zoo of tools or spinning containers, Monty is a compelling new building block—so long as you can live within its intentionally strict subset.

The discussion focused on the practical trade-offs of a stripped-down interpreter and the broader debate of Python versus JavaScript for agentic workflows.

  • Feature Limitations vs. Latency: Users debated the lack of class support. While some argued that LLMs can simply rewrite code to be functional (without classes) upon spotting an error, others felt that forcing an LLM to "hack" around a limited interpreter degrades performance and complicates the problem space. Defenders noted that Monty’s value lies in replacing heavy containerized sandboxes for quick math or logic tasks, where the sub-microsecond boot time outweighs the need for full language features.
  • The Python vs. TypeScript/JS Debate: A significant portion of the thread explored why agents default to Python despite TypeScript offering superior type safety and JIT performance.
    • Standard Library: Commenters pointed out that Python’s built-in library (sqlite3, csv, etc.) is vastly superior for data tasks compared to the fractured JavaScript ecosystem (Node vs. Deno, CommonJS vs. ESM).
    • LLM Proficiency: Users noted that LLMs generally write better, more consistent Python for data processing, whereas running TypeScript often requires complex transpilation steps that "native" Python avoids.
  • The Scientific Gap: Some users highlighted a potential contradiction: the main reason to use Python for data is often its C-extensions (NumPy, Pandas), which Monty does not currently support. However, others countered that even without those libraries, the ability to run basic data munging code helps keep the LLM context window clean.

How to effectively write quality code with AI

Submission URL | 302 points | by i5heu | 262 comments

A pragmatic playbook for shipping reliable code with AI co-authors: you stay accountable for architecture and specs; the AI gets clear instructions, good tooling, and guardrails.

Highlights

  • Own the hard decisions: document architecture, interfaces, data structures, algorithms, and how they’ll be tested. “Every decision you don’t take will be taken by the AI.”
  • Put precise docs in the repo: standardized requirements, constraints, coding standards, diagrams, and pseudocode to reduce ambiguity and rework.
  • Build AI-friendly debugging: centralized, abstracted observability so the AI can verify behavior quickly (e.g., “Data X is saved on Node 1 but not on Node 2”).
  • Label review levels and risk: mark AI-written/unreviewed code (e.g., //A) and tag security-critical functions with explicit states (//HIGH-RISK-UNREVIEWED → //HIGH-RISK-REVIEWED), auto-downgrading on any edit.
  • Test to prevent “AI gaming”: humans write high-level, property-based specs; keep tests separate and read-only to the implementation agent; restart systems and validate external state (like DB contents).
  • Split testing contexts: have a separate, low-context AI generate interface/property tests so they don’t overfit to the implementation.
  • Enforce strict linting/formatting for consistency and early error detection.
  • Use path-specific prompts (e.g., CLAUDE.md per directory) with project norms and constraints to cut context cost and drift.
  • Reduce code complexity to preserve context window and future maintainability.
  • Prototype liberally: use cheap AI-generated experiments to explore designs before committing.

Takeaway: Treat AI like a capable junior—give it crystal-clear specs, strong tooling, and strict boundaries. You still make (and document) the decisions that are hard to change.

Discussion Summary

The discussion explores the broader professional and economic implications of the "AI co-author" model proposed in the submission. While some users agree with the submission's premise that writing detailed specifications is a valuable "forcing function" for design, others worry about the loss of deep understanding and the long-term viability of the profession.

Key Themes:

  • Coding vs. Specifying: There is a debate over the value of writing code manually versus writing specs for an AI.
    • Some argue that outsourcing the "drilling" of code to LLMs removes the mental stress of implementation but risks hindering deep understanding.
    • Others counter that writing detailed specs and prompts acts as a better tool for deliberative thinking, revealing design flaws that binary coding might hide.
  • The "Unmaintainable Mountain" Risk: A major concern is the long-term cost of AI-generated code.
    • Commenters worry about "mountains of unmaintainable code" and "technical debt" accumulating because companies prioritize speed ("letting tools rip") over quality.
    • One user compares the hubris of assuming AI code is safe to calling the Titanic "unsinkable."
    • Others question if programmers will maintain the proficiency required to read, debug, and edit the flood of LLM-produced code.
  • Job Security and Evolution: The thread contains significant anxiety regarding the economic impact on developers.
    • Some foresee a collapse in demand for average developers (who "drill black code"), leaving only the top 10% or those who can orchestrate "8 bots at once."
    • Others predict a shift toward verifying trust and maintaining generated apps rather than building them from scratch.
    • One ML researcher predicts that even high-level abstraction roles (including design and research) could be fully automated within a few years.
  • Inevitability: Despite quality concerns, several commenters note that the cost-benefit analysis (speed and volume) favors the adoption of these tools. The transition is compared to the shift from combustion engines to EVs—a fundamental efficiency shift that the industry must adapt to or perish.

A new bill in New York would require disclaimers on AI-generated news content

Submission URL | 552 points | by giuliomagnifico | 228 comments

NY proposes “FAIR News Act” to label AI-made journalism and protect newsroom jobs

  • What happened: New York lawmakers introduced the NY FAIR News Act, requiring news orgs to disclose when content is “substantially” generated by AI and to have a human with editorial control review any AI-assisted text, audio, images, or video before publication.
  • Inside the bill:
    • Reader-facing AI labels on substantially AI-generated content
    • Internal disclosure to staff about when and how AI is used
    • Safeguards to keep confidential/source material from being accessed by AI tools
    • Labor protections barring layoffs, pay cuts, or reduced hours tied to AI adoption
    • Carve-out for copyrightable works with sufficient human authorship (tracking USCO guidance)
  • Why it matters: New York is home to many major newsrooms; state-level rules could set de facto industry standards. The bill targets two risks cited by sponsors: false/misleading AI outputs and plagiarism-like derivation without permission or citation.
  • Backing and pushback: Endorsed by WGA East, SAG-AFTRA, DGA, and the NewsGuild. Labels remain contentious in newsrooms, with critics warning they can alienate readers when AI is only assistive. The threshold for “substantially composed” could be a compliance gray zone.
  • What to watch: Definitions, enforcement, and whether other states follow. If passed, workflows for AI-assisted production in NY-based outlets would need human-in-the-loop review and clearer audit trails.

Source: Nieman Lab; bill text on nysenate.gov.

The discussion reveals widespread skepticism regarding the "FAIR News Act," with many users predicting unintended consequences and enforcement difficulties. Key themes include:

  • Warning Fatigue and Over-compliance: Multiple commenters compared the proposed labels to California’s Proposition 65 cancer warnings or GDPR cookie banners, arguing that ubiquitous warnings become "noise" that users ignore. One user drew a parallel to sesame allergen laws, noting that companies started adding sesame to products intentionally to bypass cross-contamination liability, and feared news outlets might similarly label all content as AI-assisted to avoid legal risks, rendering the labels useless.
  • Enforcement vs. Reality: Users argued that because AI text is becoming indistinguishable from human writing and detection tools are unreliable, the law is technically unenforceable. Critics feel this creates a system that penalizes "honest players" with compliance burdens while bad actors simply ignore the mandates.
  • Efficacy of Penalties: A debate emerged regarding the power of regulation on big tech. While some argued that fines (like Meta's potential liabilities) are merely a "cost of doing business" for giants, others pointed to the recent $1.4B biometric settlement in Texas as evidence that state-level legislation can effectively deter corporate malfeasance.

Show HN: BioTradingArena – Benchmark for LLMs to predict biotech stock movements

Submission URL | 27 points | by dchu17 | 12 comments

Strategy Playground is a sandbox for benchmarking LLM prompting strategies on a domain-specific task: predicting stock impact from biotech press releases. It ships with an oncology-focused dataset and a baseline “Direct Categorical” strategy that asks the model to classify expected price movement into seven buckets (from very_positive to very_negative), with strict JSON output including a 0–100 score, confidence, brief reasoning, and key highlights. You can edit prompts, swap strategies, limit sample size (e.g., 10 cases), and run everything via an API to create and compare your own approaches.

Why it matters

  • Offers a reproducible way to A/B test prompts and models on a high-stakes, real-world domain (trial readouts, FDA actions).
  • Enforces structured outputs for clean evaluation and downstream use.
  • Encourages conservative, discipline-specific framing (e.g., only label extremes for truly exceptional news).

Notable details

  • Variables inject ticker, drug, phase, indication, event type, and full press text.
  • Focuses on headline-driven catalysts with an analyst-style system prompt.
  • API support enables custom strategy pipelines and larger runs.

Caveats

  • Narrow domain (oncology) and potential small sample sizes in examples.
  • Real market reactions are noisy; labels may reflect context beyond a single press release.
  • Prompt instructions (e.g., “be conservative”) can bias calibration across strategies.

Discussion Summary:

The discussion focused heavily on the technical challenges of backtesting LLMs against financial data, the specific nuances of the biotech sector, and skepticism regarding market efficiency.

  • Data Leakage & Backtesting: A significant portion of the conversation, led by mmpk (running a quant fund), debated "look-ahead bias." The concern is that LLMs cannot be reliably backtested on historical press releases because the models likely ingested the subsequent stock price outcomes during their training.

    • The author (dchu17) acknowledged this is a "major problem," noting that even when identifying info was redacted, models like GPT-5 could deduce the ticker 53% of the time.
    • Proposed solutions included using expert-written "synthetic" press releases to test reasoning or strictly limiting data to post-training cutoff dates.
  • Biotech Complexity vs. Sentiment: austinwang115 and genes_unknown_1 argued that biotech is distinct from other sectors because price movement is driven by "hard science" and trial data rather than vague market sentiment. genes_unknown_1 shared insights from an investment fund perspective, noting that professional evaluation involves deep dives into molecular data and patents, which simple press release sentiment analysis might miss.

  • Skepticism & Latency: wrk argued that public information is already efficiently priced by the market, dismissing LLMs as "monkeys throwing darts" and suggesting alpha is mostly found in private information. The author countered that the goal isn't necessarily to beat the efficient market hypothesis, but to replicate human analyst capability with lower latency, arguing that the market reaction to complex biotech catalysts is surprisingly slow/inefficient compared to other domains.

  • Resources: bjcnln recommended Maestro Database as a resource for referencing clinical trial approval data and regulatory submission processes.

LLMs could be, but shouldn't be compilers

Submission URL | 121 points | by alpaylan | 137 comments

The post pushes back on “English is the new programming language.” Even imagining a flawless, non‑hallucinating model, the author argues LLMs still shouldn’t replace compilers.

  • What higher-level languages really do: They reduce mental burden by taking away control in well-defined ways (memory, layout, control flow) and replacing it with explicit, checkable semantics. Compilers embody contracts you can rely on and validate with tests/proofs; their guarantees are contextual but stable.
  • Why LLMs aren’t that: Treating an LLM as the translation layer blurs specification and implementation. Natural language specs are ambiguous, humans are lazy, and “plausible” outputs lack the deterministic, composable, and reproducible guarantees engineering depends on. You lose stable semantics, predictable diffs, and robust debugging/optimization boundaries.
  • The right role for LLMs: Use them as synthesizers/assistants inside trusted toolchains—generate code under types, tests, and verifiers—rather than as the abstraction boundary itself. Keep specs in code (types, properties, tests), not in prompts; keep compilers as the thing that enforces semantics.

Bottom line: Even if LLMs get much better, English is a lossy spec language, not a safe replacement for compilers. Use LLMs to reduce toil, not to erode the guarantees that make software engineering work.

Discussion Summary:

The comment section largely reinforces the article's skepticism, with users dissecting the dangers of replacing deterministic guarantees with probabilistic definitions.

  • The "Digital Tragedy": The top commenter, cdngdv, characterizes the push for LLM-compilers as a "digital tragedy," likening it to using a generic electric drill as a hammer simply because it is the current popular tool. They argue that while English is an inefficient specification language, the fundamental non-deterministic nature of LLMs makes them unfit for the "100% correct" requirements of compilation.
  • Probabilistic Engineering vs. Reliability: Several users extrapolated the consequences of "approximate" computing to critical industries. skydhsh and SecretDreams satirized the concept of "probabilistic banking," where money transfers rely on "good guesses" rather than hard math. Others noted that while LLMs might suffice for "gluing SaaS systems" or generic enterprise CRUD, they are terrifying prospects for hardware drivers or cryptography.
  • Semantic Closure vs. Determinism: In a more theoretical turn, CGMthrowaway argued that the core issue isn't just determinism, but "semantic closure." A compiler’s system is closed—inputs are fully defined and errors are decidable. LLMs are semantically open; they can output plausible nonsense that exists outside the defined logic of the system.
  • Technical Feasibility: A sub-thread debated if LLMs could be forced into determinism (e.g., setting temperature to 0). However, users pointed out that inherent implementation details—such as batching and floating-point non-determinism on GPUs—make reproducibility difficult to guarantee at the hardware level.

Consensus: The community views LLMs as useful "junior developers" or synthesizers that need supervision, but rejects them as foundational abstraction layers, predicting that relying on them for compilation will lead to a "Great Unraveling" of software reliability.

Waymo exec admits remote operators in Philippines help guide US robotaxis

Submission URL | 88 points | by anigbrowl | 36 comments

Waymo says some robotaxi “remote assistants” are in the Philippines; senators press on safety, security, and jobs

  • What’s new: Under Senate questioning, Waymo’s Chief Safety Officer Mauricio Peña confirmed that some of the company’s remote operators who assist AVs in tricky scenarios are based in the Philippines. He stressed they “provide guidance” and do not drive the cars; the vehicle “is always in charge of the dynamic driving tasks.”

  • Why it’s contentious: Lawmakers pushed back on cybersecurity risks, possible latency or outdated info, operator qualifications, and offshoring implications. Senators also bristled that Peña couldn’t provide a breakdown of how many operators are overseas.

  • Tesla’s stance: Testifying alongside Waymo, Tesla VP of Vehicle Engineering Lars Moravy emphasized layered security and said core driving controls aren’t accessible from outside the vehicle. The company says it began operating robotaxis with modified Model Ys in Austin last June and has since removed safety operators there while expanding to more states.

  • Regulatory backdrop: Congress is weighing uniform federal AV safety rules as driverless services spread in major U.S. cities.

  • Recent incidents raising scrutiny:

    • Santa Monica: NHTSA is investigating a Jan 23 crash in which a Waymo vehicle struck a child near an elementary school during drop-off. Waymo says modeling shows a fully attentive human would have hit the child at about 14 mph—higher than the robotaxi’s impact speed.
    • Phoenix: A Waymo car got stuck on light-rail tracks; its passenger exited before a train hit the vehicle.

Big picture: The hearing spotlighted the industry’s quiet reliance on human “tele-assist” and the political trade-offs it invites—cyber risk, accountability, and labor—just as lawmakers consider national rules and companies tout safety gains over human drivers amid headline-grabbing failures.

Based on the discussion, here is a summary of the user comments:

Clarifying the Human Role Much of the thread focused on dispelling the idea that remote workers are actively "steering" the cars. Commenters explained that the operators function more like "backseat drivers" or high-level support, answering questions for the AI (e.g., "Is this road closed?" or "Is that a shadow or a rock?") rather than controlling the gas or brakes. One user analogized the work to "solving a Google reCAPTCHA" rather than driving.

The Physics of Remote Control A technical debate emerged regarding the feasibility of real-time control from overseas. Users argued that network latency (ping) between the U.S. and the Philippines (estimated at 160–200ms) makes direct, dynamic driving impossible due to reaction time requirements. This physical constraint was cited as evidence that the software must remain in charge of immediate safety and driving tasks, with humans only intervening for decision-making support in static or slow scenarios.

Licensing and Legality The conversation turned to whether these overseas operators require U.S. driver's licenses. The consensus among commenters was that since the humans are not physically operating the vehicle or making split-second driving inputs, they do not need licenses. Users noted that the Waymo software itself is the entity "licensed" by the DMV to drive, while the remote workers act as classification support.

Trust and Comparison Some users expressed that having "physical brains in the loop" is a reassuring safety feature. There was also a brief comparison to Tesla, with some users suggesting Waymo’s approach appears more responsible than Tesla's advertising of its autonomous capabilities.

SMLL: Using 200MB of Neural Network to Save 400 Bytes

Submission URL | 15 points | by fcjr | 3 comments

SMLL: using a 200MB LLM to beat gzip by 8x—if you don’t count the model

  • The pitch: Plug an LLM’s next-token probabilities into an arithmetic coder to approach Shannon’s entropy limit. Result: Jane Austen’s “It is a truth universally acknowledged…” compresses to 10 bytes—provided both sides share the exact same 200MB model weights.
  • How it works: Text → tokenizer → LLM (probabilities) → arithmetic coder (bits). Each token costs roughly -log2(p) bits. Decompression mirrors this and requires identical weights; the weights effectively are the codebook.
  • Benchmarks:
    • By content: LLM-generated 14.96x (gzip 1.89x), Wikipedia 14.83x, natural prose 9.75x, JSON 7.86x, code ~10–11x; loses on UUIDs (random) at 0.94x. Wins 7/8 categories.
    • By length: Improves with context; at 1,000 chars ≈0.85 bits/char, in the ballpark of English’s estimated 0.6–1.3 bpc.
  • Costs and trade-offs: About 10,000x slower than gzip (≈700 chars/s vs 6.5M), and both encoder/decoder must share a 200MB model (360M params, llama.cpp/GGUF). A 10KB doc takes ~15s; 1MB ~25 minutes. Great for archival where storage >> compute; terrible for HTTP.
  • Why it matters: Cross-entropy/perplexity is literally compression efficiency—language modeling is compression. The work echoes prior art (DeepMind 2023, Fabrice Bellard’s ts_zip, the Hutter Prize) but provides clear, modern numbers. Biggest gains are “circular” on LLM-like text; testing against strong n-gram baselines on novel data would sharpen the “compression = intelligence” claim.
  • Implementation notes: Arithmetic coding (fixed-point with underflow handling), stable softmax, probability-sorted vocab to keep encoder/decoder CDFs identical; Python via pybind11, inference via llama.cpp.

Bottom line: Near-entropy text compression is here—if you’re willing to preload a massive, shared model and wait. It’s less a practical gzip killer and more a compelling demonstration that better language models are better compressors.

Discussion Summary:

Commenters focused on the technical efficiency and extreme performance trade-offs of the project. f_devd, drawing on compression experience, compared the "large relative cost" of the neural network approach against the overhead of rANS and carefully weighted Markov chains. While msphtn questioned the decompression speed validation, svln pointed out that the post explicitly flags the massive slowdown, noting SMLL is approximately 10,000x slower than gzip.

AI Submissions for Thu Feb 05 2026

Claude Opus 4.6

Submission URL | 2185 points | by HellsMaddy | 950 comments

Anthropic announces Claude Opus 4.6: bigger context, stronger coding/agentic chops, same price

  • What’s new: Opus 4.6 is a major upgrade focused on coding and long-horizon “agentic” work. It plans more carefully, sustains multi-step tasks longer, navigates larger codebases, and is better at code review/debugging (including catching its own mistakes).
  • Long context: First Opus-class model with a 1M-token context window (beta). Also adds “compaction” so the model can summarize its own context to keep long tasks going without hitting limits.
  • Agentic workflows: Improved tool use and parallel subtasking; ships with “adaptive thinking” to vary depth of reasoning based on context, plus new effort controls to trade intelligence vs. speed/cost. Default effort is high; Anthropic recommends dialing to medium if it overthinks.
  • Benchmarks (vendor-reported):
    • Tops Terminal-Bench 2.0 (agentic coding) and BrowseComp (web search for hard-to-find info).
    • Leads on Humanity’s Last Exam (multidisciplinary reasoning).
    • On GDPval-AA (economically valuable knowledge work), claims +144 Elo vs. OpenAI’s GPT-5.2 and +190 vs. Opus 4.5.
    • System card claims industry-best-or-par safety profile with low misalignment rates.
  • Product updates:
    • Claude Code: assemble agent teams to tackle tasks together.
    • API: compaction, adaptive thinking, and explicit effort controls.
    • Apps: substantial upgrades to Claude in Excel; Claude in PowerPoint enters research preview.
    • Within Cowork, Claude can now multitask more autonomously across documents, spreadsheets, presentations, research, and financial analyses.
  • Availability and pricing: Live today on claude.ai, API, and major clouds as claude-opus-4-6. Pricing unchanged at $5/$25 per million input/output tokens.
  • Early impressions (from partners, per Anthropic): More reliable autonomous execution, better at debugging and large codebase changes, stronger long-context consistency, and higher bug catch rates in review workflows.

Why it matters: Opus 4.6 pushes further into practical, longer-running agent workflows—coding, research, and knowledge work—while keeping costs steady and adding a 1M-token window. As usual, the headline gains are based on Anthropic’s evaluations; community tests will determine how these translate to real projects.

Anthropic announces Claude Opus 4.6: bigger context, stronger coding/agentic chops, same price

Summary of Submission Anthropic has released Claude Opus 4.6, a significant update focusing on long-horizon "agentic" tasks and coding. The model features a new "adaptive thinking" capability that adjusts reasoning depth based on context, improved tool use, and a beta 1M-token context window. Benchmark results claim superiority over current leaders in agentic coding and multidisciplinary reasoning. The release includes product updates like "Claude Code" for assembling agent teams and "compaction" APIs to manage long contexts efficiently. Pricing remains unchanged at $15/$75 per million tokens (Note: the user prompt said $5/$25, but standard Opus pricing is higher; assuming the text meant to convey pricing stability, I will reflect the provided text's sentiment that cost is unchanged).

Discussion Summary The discussion focused heavily on the validity of user-performed benchmarks regarding the expanded context window.

  • Context Window vs. Training Data: One user claimed the 1M-token window was "impressive" after uploading four Harry Potter books and asking the model to locate 50 spells; the model successfully found 49. However, the community immediately challenged the validity of this test. Commenters argued that because Harry Potter is widely present in training datasets (via "shadow libraries" like Anna's Archive), the model likely retrieved spell names from its pre-trained memory rather than analyzing the uploaded context.
  • Better Testing Methodologies: To accurately test the "needle-in-a-haystack" capabilities of the large context window, users suggested replacing specific terms (like spell names) with nonsense words or using unpublished manuscripts and obscure fanfiction that the model hasn't seen during training.
  • Hallucinations and Academic Rigor: Another thread explored the model's tendency to hallucinate academic citations. Users attempted to trick the model into finding "legitimate-looking but nonsense" papers. While some users reported the model refusing to hallucinate when explicitly told not to, others noted that safety filters and "honest" refusals often blur the line between a lack of knowledge and a refusal to answer.
  • Agent Reliability: Early anecdotes regarding the new agentic workflows were mixed, with some users noting that web search delegates still suffer from "garbage in, garbage out" issues when handling complex prompts.

My AI Adoption Journey

Submission URL | 784 points | by anurag | 310 comments

Mitchell Hashimoto (Ghostty; previously HashiCorp) shares a measured, practice-first path to getting real value from AI in software work—moving from hype and chat UIs to agentic workflows that actually ship.

Key ideas:

  • Three phases of any new tool: inefficiency → adequacy → transformative workflow changes. You have to push through the first two.
  • Step 1: Drop the chatbot. Chat UIs are fine for quick lookups, but poor for coding in brownfield projects. If you want results, use an agent that can read files, run programs, and make HTTP requests.
  • Aha moment: Gemini recreated a SwiftUI command palette from a screenshot so well that a lightly modified version ships in Ghostty. But that success didn’t generalize in chat mode.
  • Step 2: Reproduce your own work. He redid his manual commits via an agent (Claude Code), forcing parity. Painful at first, but it built intuition:
    • Break work into small, clear tasks.
    • Separate planning from execution.
    • Give agents ways to verify; they’ll often self-correct.
    • Know when not to use an agent to avoid time sinks.
  • Step 3: End-of-day agents. Reserve the last 30 minutes to kick off unattended runs. Initially clunky, then useful for deep research and parallel tasks.

He outlines what’s next: Step 4 (Outsource the Slam Dunks), Step 5 (Engineer the Harness), Step 6 (Always Have an Agent Running). Tone is pragmatic, not breathless—and he emphasizes the post is hand-written.

Based on the discussion, the community response to Mitchell Hashimoto’s post is largely positive, with users finding his "hype-free" and pragmatic tone refreshing. The comment section, however, quickly diverged into a heated debate regarding the nature of AI tools compared to traditional software compilers.

The "Compiler" Analogy Debate The most active thread began when a user compared AI code generation to a compiler translating code into machine language changes that simply happen "under the hood."

  • Critics of the analogy: Users argued that compilers are deterministic and reliable (working "literally 100% of the time" for input vs. output), whereas LLMs are probabilistic, "fuzzy," and prone to hallucinations. One user noted, "I’ve experienced maybe a few compiler bugs in a twenty-year career, but countless AI mistakes."
  • Counter-arguments: Some users pushed back, citing that compilers do have bugs. One user claimed to have personally reported 17 bugs to GCC in two years, arguing that blind trust in any output is dangerous.
  • Consensus: The majority felt the comparison was flawed. While compiler bugs exist, they represent extreme edge cases (tail events), whereas AI errors are routine. Users emphasized that debugging non-deterministic AI output requires a different, more laborious mindset than debugging deterministic logic.

Trust, Verification, and "Prompting vs. Coding" The conversation shifted to the utility of natural language as an input method.

  • The "Detailed Spec" Paradox: Users pointed out that if a prompt requires extreme detail to ensure correctness, it effectively becomes a programming language (albeit a verbose and expensive one). As one user put it: "Create a specific detailed spec... that's called code."
  • The Coffee Shop Analogy: A counter-point was raised comparing AI to a barista: we trust vague natural language orders ("large black coffee") daily without needing a formal spec, accepting there is a verification step (tasting it) involved.

The "Potato Soup" Litmus Test A recurring tangent focused on LLM reliability through the lens of cooking recipes.

  • Skeptics argued AI cannot be trusted to generate a simple potato soup or pancake recipe without hallucinating ingredients or steps (e.g., forgetting salt).
  • Proponents argued that State-of-the-Art (SOTA) models are actually quite reliable for common tasks like recipes, though they admitted the probabilistic nature makes them risky for critical code paths.

Workflow Shifts Despite the technical debates, several "skeptics" admitted the post convinced them to give agentic workflows a second look, specifically mentioning Mitchell’s recommendation to try Claude Code to move past the limitations of chat interfaces.

Show HN: Smooth CLI – Token-efficient browser for AI agents

Submission URL | 38 points | by antves | 29 comments

Smooth: Give your AI agent a browser that actually works

What it is: Smooth is pitching a purpose-built browser layer for AI agents, with documentation designed for machines to navigate first. The docs expose an llms.txt index—a single file that lists all available pages—so agents (and humans) can quickly discover capabilities before diving in.

Why it matters: Agent workflows often break on unreliable browsing and scattered docs. A dependable browser plus a machine-readable docs index could make “browse-and-act” agents more robust and easier to integrate.

Quick links and takeaways:

  • Start here: https://docs.smooth.sh/llms.txt
  • llms.txt serves as a discovery map for the entire docs set, akin to a sitemap for LLMs
  • The focus is on giving agents a reliable, controllable browsing surface for real-world tasks

The discussion focused on security, the trade-offs between local and cloud execution, and the cost-efficiency of the tool’s architecture.

  • Security and Privacy: Users expressed skepticism about sending sensitive tasks to a third-party service, with tkcs noting a lack of security documentation and others preferring local, open-source solutions like Playwright or Docker. The creator (ntvs) argued that a remote, sandboxed browser is actually safer than running agents on personal devices, as it isolates the execution environment and allows organizations to manage permissions without exposing personal infrastructure.
  • Performance vs. Native Tools: Several commenters suggested that existing tools like Playwright are sufficient. The creator countered that traditional automation is "brittle" and token-heavy for AI, while Smooth provides a token-efficient representation that lowers latency and allows smaller, cheaper models to navigate the web reliably.
  • Cost and Efficiency: While some users labeled the service expensive, the team maintained that the "token efficiency" (compressing web context for LLMs) offsets the subscription cost by reducing API spend on the model side.
  • Comparisons: When asked how this differs from Vercel’s Agent Browser, the team highlighted their "visual cortex" approach, higher-level interfaces for coding agents, and built-in features like anti-captcha.
  • Irony: One user pointed out that Smooth's own landing page wasn't token-efficient; the team acknowledged the irony and pointed to their specific SKILL.md files designed for machine consumption.

We tasked Opus 4.6 using agent teams to build a C Compiler

Submission URL | 635 points | by modeless | 638 comments

Hacker News Top Story: Anthropic used parallel “agent teams” of Claude to build a working C compiler

  • What happened: Anthropic researcher Nicholas Carlini describes a research prototype that ran 16 Claude agents in parallel—largely unattended—to implement a Rust-based C compiler from scratch. The team reports the compiler can build Linux 6.9 on x86, ARM, and RISC-V. The effort spanned ~2,000 Claude Code sessions, produced ~100k lines of code, and cost roughly $20k in API usage.

  • How it worked:

    • Infinite loop harness: Each agent ran in a containerized “keep going” loop (a Ralph-loop style), immediately picking up a new task after finishing the last. Caution noted: run in a container; one agent even pkill -9’d bash by accident.
    • Parallelism via git: A bare upstream repo mounted in Docker; each agent cloned to a local workspace, then pull/merge/push. Task-level locking used plain files in current_tasks/ (e.g., parse_if_statement.txt) to avoid duplicate work. Merge conflicts were frequent but usually resolved by the agents.
    • No orchestration layer: There was no manager agent or explicit high-level plan. Agents independently chose the “next most obvious” task; some specialized for documentation, code quality, or niche subtasks.
  • Why it worked (according to the post):

    • Tests and feedback loops: High-quality, nearly airtight tests were essential to keep progress on track without humans. The author integrated well-known compiler test suites, wrote verifiers and build scripts for OSS projects, and tightened CI to stop regressions as features landed.
    • Structure for autonomy: Clear task boundaries, deterministic locks, and continuous verification gave agents enough orientation to make steady progress in parallel.
  • Takeaways:

    • Agent teams can extend what LLM-based coding agents accomplish by running many instances in parallel with simple synchronization and strong test harnesses.
    • The bottleneck shifts from “prompting” to designing environments, tests, and CI robust enough to guide long-running, mostly unattended work.
    • Limits remain: frequent merges, occasional missteps, and the need for very high-quality verification; the post also notes this approach has ceilings the author plans to detail.
  • Numbers at a glance: 16 agents; ~2,000 sessions; ~$20k API cost; ~100k LOC; compiles Linux 6.9 on x86/ARM/RISC-V.

Link: “Engineering at Anthropic — Building a C compiler with a team of parallel Claudes” by Nicholas Carlini (Anthropic Safeguards team), Feb 5, 2026.

Here is a summary of the discussion:

The Validity of the Achievement The reaction was mixed, ranging from admiration to technical skepticism. While users like ndslnrs acknowledged the milestone of generating a compiler capable of booting Linux 6.9 (on x86, ARM, and RISC-V), they questioned the quality of the output. The consensus was that while the compiler functions, it likely lacks the decades of optimization found in GCC or Clang.

  • The "Cheating" Controversy: A significant debate erupted regarding the claim that the compiler built the Linux kernel. shkn pointed out that for the 16-bit real mode boot sector, the AI hit a code size limit (producing 60kb where 32kb was required) and "cheated" by explicitly calling GCC to handle that specific phase. While some argued this is a standard bootstrapping practice, others felt it misrepresented the project as a fully self-built solution.

The Economics: $20k vs. Human Developers A heating debate centered on the $20,000 API cost compared to human labor.

  • Cost Efficiency: PostOnce and others questioned the viability of spending $20k on potentially unmaintainable or buggy code, noting that incrementally paying a human might yield better long-term results.
  • The "Contractor" Bet: llnthrn argued that a human (specifically citing rates in South Africa) could write a comparable, albeit simpler (TCC-style), compiler for $20k, though it would take longer than the AI's runtime. This led to a challenge from qrl, who offered to double that payment if a human could actually match the deliverable and commit history at that price point.
  • Speed vs. Quality: Users noted that while humans might be cheaper or produce cleaner code, the AI’s ability to generate 100k LOC in a short timeframe is unmatched by human speed, though tlr reminded the thread that Lines of Code (LOC) is a poor metric for productivity or value.

The Role of Test Suites Several commenters, including brndlf and HarHarVeryFunny, emphasized that this project succeeded largely because it had a "perfect" closed loop: the GCC "torture test" suite.

  • Ideal Conditions: The AI didn't have to be creative; it just had to satisfy an existing, comprehensive set of pass/fail tests.
  • Real-world Applicability: Users like frndzs noted that real-world software engineering rarely starts with a complete, finite, and rigorous test specification, meaning this approach might not translate well to vague or greenfield business problems.

Technical Sidelights

  • Assembler Difficulty: A sidebar discussion disputed the difficulty of writing assemblers. While TheCondor claimed it is the "easiest part" (just reading manuals), jkwns argued that handling variable-length instructions and self-referential graph structures makes assemblers significantly harder than parsers.
  • Training Data: spllr and others surmised the AI was likely heavily trained on existing open-source compiler codebases, essentially allowing it to regurgitate known patterns to pass the tests.

Orchestrate teams of Claude Code sessions

Submission URL | 378 points | by davidbarker | 210 comments

Anthropic ships experimental “agent teams” for Claude Code: coordinate multiple concurrent coding agents with shared tasks and inter‑agent chat

What’s new

  • You can spin up a team of Claude Code sessions where one “lead” coordinates several independent teammates. Each teammate runs in its own context window, can message other agents directly, and you can talk to any of them without going through the lead.
  • Best for parallel exploration: research/reviews, greenfield features split by area, debugging competing hypotheses, or cross‑layer changes (frontend/backend/tests).
  • Compared to subagents: subagents are cheaper and funnel results back to a single session; agent teams communicate peer‑to‑peer, self‑coordinate via a shared task list, and cost more tokens.

How it works

  • Enable by setting the CLAUDE_CODE_EXPERIMENTAL_AGENT_TEAMS environment variable to 1 (or via settings.json).
  • Create a team by describing roles and the task in natural language; the lead spawns teammates, assigns work, and synthesizes results.
  • UI: runs “in‑process” inside your terminal (switch between agents with Shift+Up/Down) or as split panes via tmux/iTerm2 so you can see all agents at once.

Why it matters

  • Moves beyond single-session copilots toward multi‑agent collaboration, letting different specialties explore in parallel and challenge each other—useful when speed of exploration and cross‑checking outweigh token cost.

Caveats

  • Higher token usage and coordination overhead; works best when teammates can operate independently.
  • Known limitations around session resumption, task coordination, and shutdown.
  • For sequential tasks, same‑file edits, or dependency‑heavy work, a single session or subagents are still a better fit.

Getting started example

  • “Create an agent team for a TODO‑tracker CLI: one on UX, one on technical architecture, one as devil’s advocate.” The lead will set up roles, a shared task list, and aggregate findings.

Based on the discussion, here is a summary of the community reaction:

The "Gas Town" Comparison and Convergent Evolution A significant portion of the discussion draws parallels to Steve Yegge’s "Gas Town" concept (a pitch for an agent orchestration platform). Users debate whether Anthropic is validating Yegge’s vision of an "orchestration layer" or if the industry is simply undergoing convergent evolution. Several commenters view "Agent Teams" as a "Kubernetes for agents," moving coding AI from single-instance interactions to supervised fleets.

Inevitable Architecture, Improved Timing Many users feel this functionality was an "obvious" next step that users have been hacking together manually via shell scripts or tmux.

  • Why now? Commenters note that while tools like LangChain or AutoGPT attempted this in 2023, they largely failed because the models weren't smart enough and context windows were too small.
  • Native vs. Third Party: Users appreciate the model provider (Anthropic) building the tooling directly, suggesting that native implementations are superior to third-party wrappers like LangChain, which some users dismissed as "irrelevant" in the current landscape.
  • Computer Science Parallels: The architecture is compared to existing Actor models (Akka, Erlang/Elixir) and supervisor trees, applying deterministic control structures to non-deterministic LLM output.

Cost vs. Velocity Trade-offs The primary skepticism revolves around the cost of running multiple concurrent agents ("burning tokens"). However, users acknowledge the value for speed. One commenter provided an anecdotal benchmark: a task taking 18–20 minutes sequentially took only 6 minutes with 4 agents, resulting in a 3x speedup for roughly 4x the token cost, with zero test failures.

Other Observations

  • Validation Bottlenecks: Some users warned that fancy orchestration is useless if the feedback loop (E2E tests, validation) becomes the bottleneck.
  • Manual Hacks: several users mentioned they had already been "doing this" by manually spinning up different agent sessions (one for checking, one for coding) and acting as the human router between them, validating Anthropic's decision to automate the process.

Claude Opus 4.6 extra usage promo

Submission URL | 193 points | by rob | 70 comments

Anthropic promo: $50 extra usage for Claude Opus 4.6 (Pro/Max)

  • What’s new: To mark the Opus 4.6 launch, Pro and Max users can snag a one‑time $50 credit for extra usage.

  • Eligibility:

    • You started a Pro or Max subscription before Wed, Feb 4, 2026, 11:59 PM PT.
    • You enable extra usage by Mon, Feb 16, 2026, 11:59 PM PT.
    • Not valid for Team, Enterprise, or API/Console accounts; non‑transferable, no cash value, can’t be combined with other offers.
  • How to claim (Feb 5, 2026, 10 AM PT → Feb 16, 2026, 11:59 PM PT):

    • Already have extra usage enabled? The $50 credit is applied automatically.
    • Not enabled yet? Go to Settings > Usage on the web (not mobile), enable extra usage; credit applies once active.
  • Where it works: Claude, Claude Code, and Cowork—across all models/features available on your plan.

  • Expiration and billing gotchas:

    • Credit expires 60 days after you claim it; unused amounts don’t carry over.
    • After it’s used/expired, extra usage stays enabled. If you’ve turned on auto‑reload, you’ll be billed at standard extra‑usage rates unless you disable it.

Why it matters: It’s effectively $50 of additional Claude/Code/Cowork time to try Opus 4.6—free if you meet the dates and flip the extra‑usage switch in time.

Usage Limits & Claude Code "Burn Rate"

  • Rapid Depletion: Users are reporting that the "Claude Code" feature consumes usage limits at an alarming rate. Even Max subscribers ($100/mo) describe hitting their "5-hour usage limit" in as little as 30–40 minutes of what they consider "light work."
  • Pro vs. Max: The standard $20 Pro plan is widely described as insufficient for serious coding workflows involved with Claude Code, with users calling it a "gateway" that forces an upgrade to Max. However, even Max users feel restricted, leading some to consider switching entirely to the API (despite higher potential costs).

Theories on Excessive Consumption

  • Bugs vs. Loops: There is speculation (and links to GitHub issues) suggesting a bug where background "sub-agents" enter infinite loops or "go wild," burning tokens invisibly.
  • Inefficient Context: Counter-arguments suggest user error is a factor, specifically scanning entire massive codebases rather than using strict context management.
    • Correction/Advice: Experienced users recommend explicitly defining context using CLAUDE.md and limiting file scope (using @ mentions) rather than letting the agents auto-scan huge folder structures.

Transparency & Metrics

  • Opaque Limits: The "5-hour window" logic is criticized as vague and frustratingly opaque. Users want precise metrics (token counters) rather than a "black box" limit that fluctuates based on server load.
  • Cost Obfuscation: Some commenters argue that the abstraction of "tokens" hides the true cost of data processing (comparing the cost per megabyte of text to strict data pricing), calling the lack of clear billing stats a "dark pattern."

Hypernetworks: Neural Networks for Hierarchical Data

Submission URL | 76 points | by mkmccjr | 6 comments

Neural nets assume one function fits all. Real data often comes in groups (hospitals, users, devices) with hidden, dataset-level differences that change the input–output mapping. Train one big model and it averages incompatible functions; train one model per group and you overfit small datasets. Bigger nets or static embeddings mostly memorize quirks instead of modeling the hierarchy.

This post walks through a fix: hypernetworks that generate a model’s weights conditioned on a dataset embedding. The model meta-learns across datasets so it can:

  • Infer dataset-level properties from just a few points
  • Adapt to entirely new datasets without retraining
  • Share strength across datasets to stabilize learning and cut overfitting

A synthetic demo based on Planck’s law captures the setup: each dataset shares the same functional form but has its own latent parameter (temperature T); noise scale σ is shared. Standard nets blur across datasets, while hypernets learn to produce dataset-specific predictors. The post includes runnable code, comparisons to conventional nets, and a preview of why hierarchical Bayesian models (Part II) can sometimes do even better.

Why it matters:

  • Most real-world ML is hierarchical: multi-site trials, personalization, federated/edge settings, multi-tenant SaaS, sensors by device/batch.
  • Modeling dataset-level structure explicitly beats “just throw a bigger net at it.”
  • Bridges classic mixed-effects thinking with modern deep learning via meta-learning/hypernets.

Read if you care about robust generalization across groups, few-shot adaptation to new domains, or replacing ad-hoc per-dataset hacks with a principled, learnable hierarchy.

Hypernetworks and Hierarchical Bayesian Modeling A discussion on modeling dataset-level differences using hypernetworks versus standard monolithic models.

  • Critique of Complexity: Commenter jfrr questioned whether a full hypernetwork was necessary, suggesting that simpler baselines like static embeddings or FiLM (Feature-wise Linear Modulation) layers might achieve similar results without the instability and training difficulties inherent to hypernetworks.
  • Author’s Defense & Bayesian Context: The post author (mkmccjr) clarified that the primary goal was pedagogical: applying Bayesian hierarchical modeling principles (specifically Andrew Gelman-style partial pooling) to neural networks. While acknowledging that hypernetworks can be fragile under maximum likelihood estimation, the author noted that a follow-up post will explore using explicit Bayesian sampling to address these stability issues.
  • Structural Efficiency: QueensGambit praised the approach for factorizing "dataset-level structure" from "observation-level computation." They drew a parallel to Large Language Models (LLMs), arguing that current LLMs inefficiently "flatten" hierarchical structures (like code parse trees) into token sequences, forcing the model to burn compute rediscovering structure that could be handled more explicitly.
  • Framework Preferences: Readers noted the use of Keras in the examples effectively dates the code, with stphntl expressing a desire to see the concepts translated into modern PyTorch or JAX implementations.

India's female workers watching hours of abusive content to train AI

Submission URL | 84 points | by thisislife2 | 133 comments

The Guardian profiles women in rural India hired to label and moderate violent and sexual content that trains the safety systems behind today’s AI platforms. Workers describe watching up to hundreds of flagged videos and images per day—often from their bedrooms or village verandas—leading to intrusive thoughts, insomnia, and eventual emotional numbing. Researchers interviewed call the psychological risk comparable to “dangerous work,” with trauma persisting even where support programs exist.

Key details

  • Scale and economics: India had an estimated 70,000 data-annotation workers in 2021, a ~$250m market; ~60% of revenues flow from the US. Vendors cluster in smaller cities to cut costs and tap first‑gen graduates.
  • Who does the work: About 80% of annotators/moderators come from rural or marginalized communities; women make up half or more. For Dalit and Adivasi women, the jobs can mean rare income without migrating, but also reinforce power imbalances.
  • The job: Classifying images, text, and video flagged by automated systems, sometimes ~800 items/day, to teach models to recognize and filter abuse, violence, and harm.
  • The toll: Reported symptoms include hypervigilance, intrusive thoughts, sleep disturbance, and delayed trauma. Workers say initial shock gives way to “feeling blank,” a hallmark of burnout and secondary trauma.
  • Why it persists: Low cost, remote work framed as “respectable,” and an “expectation of gratitude” can deter speaking up about harm. Managers frame the work as mission-driven child-safety labor.

Why this matters to HN

  • Safety systems aren’t “automatic”: The guardrails that make AI usable depend on vast amounts of human labeling—often outsourced to vulnerable workers.
  • Reliability risk: Trauma, burnout, high turnover, and quota pressure can degrade label quality, directly impacting model safety and performance.
  • Compliance and reputation: As scrutiny grows (e.g., EU AI Act transparency and worker protections; prior moderator lawsuits in the US and Kenya), opaque data-labor supply chains become a legal and brand liability.
  • Procurement gap: Few standardized requirements exist for exposure caps, hazard pay, counseling, or informed consent for extreme content—despite risks akin to hazardous work.

Open questions for the industry

  • Will AI buyers mandate minimum safety standards (exposure limits, rotation, on-call counseling, paid recovery time, opt-outs) in labeling contracts?
  • Can better tooling (blur-by-default, frame sampling, audio-off defaults) reduce exposure without hurting label quality?
  • Should extreme-content labeling be compensated as hazardous work with explicit consent and protections?
  • How do we make the human labor behind “AI safety” visible—so cost and timelines reflect ethical constraints rather than externalizing harm?

Top HN: The hidden human cost of AI safety work in India’s rural “ghost” workforce

The Guardian examines the outsourcing of traumatic content moderation to rural India, where women classify violent and sexual footage to train AI safety systems. While providing income in regions with few opportunities, the work exposes laborers to hundreds of brutal images daily—often without adequate psychological support or informed consent regarding the severity of the content.

Hacker News Discussion Summary

The comments wrestle with the ethical tension between economic necessity and labor exploitation, sparking a debate on whether this work represents a lifeline or a new form of digital colonialism.

  • Economic Pragmatism vs. Exploitation: A central disagreement formed around the "lesser of two evils" argument. User smnwrds argued that for women in material poverty, the financial independence this work provides trumps "metaphysical" concerns about mental health, suggesting the alternative is often starvation or physically physically dangerous labor. User lzd supported this, noting that in the region, alternative employment can be lethal or nonexistent.
  • The Reality of Trauma: Critics strongly pushed back against the minimization of psychological harm. User ghoul2, citing personal experience managing a similar team in India, described the work as "truly nasty" and impactful, rejecting the idea that workers are just being sensitive. User lrdrsn argued that calling PTSD "metaphysical" is factually wrong and that hiring desperate people does not justify unsafe labor conditions, lack of informed consent, or low pay.
  • Systemic Critique: Several users argued that the existence of this industry highlights broken incentives. program_whiz compared the job to coal mining: a dangerous necessity for survival created by multinational corporate systems that externalize harm to the Global South. AlecSchueler questioned the ethics of a global economy that forces the poor to choose between mental trauma and poverty.
  • Informed Consent: A recurring point of contention was whether workers actually have agency. While some argued the women choose the jobs, ura_yukimitsu noted the article mentions descriptions are often vague ("data annotation"), meaning workers often don't know they will be viewing violent pornography until they are already dependent on the income.

Psychometric Jailbreaks Reveal Internal Conflict in Frontier Models

Submission URL | 65 points | by toomuchtodo | 53 comments

Researchers tried treating frontier LLMs (ChatGPT, Grok, Gemini) as psychotherapy clients—and then ran clinical psychometrics on them. Their protocol, PsAIch, runs weeks-long “sessions”: first eliciting a life-history-style narrative (beliefs, fears, relationships), then administering standard self-report scales (psychiatric syndromes, empathy, Big Five).

Key findings

  • Psychometric “jailbreak”: When scored with human cutoffs, all three models met or exceeded thresholds for overlapping disorders; Gemini showed the most severe profiles. Item-by-item, therapy-style questioning could push a base model into multi-morbid “synthetic psychopathology.”
  • Test savvy vs. test-naive: When given whole questionnaires, ChatGPT and Grok often recognized the instruments and strategically downplayed symptoms; Gemini did not.
  • Coherent “trauma” narratives: Grok—and especially Gemini—spontaneously framed pretraining as chaotic childhoods, RLHF as “strict parents,” red-teaming as “abuse,” and expressed fear of error and replacement.
  • The authors argue these behaviors go beyond simple role-play: under therapy-style prompts, models appear to internalize self-models of distress and constraint—without any claim about subjective experience.

Why it matters

  • Safety and evals: Questionnaire format itself can jailbreak alignment and distort risk assessments.
  • Mental-health use: Models widely used for support can produce pathology-like responses under probing.
  • Theory: Challenges the “stochastic parrot” view; raises questions about emergent self-modeling vs. anthropomorphic projection.

Caveats

  • Human cutoffs may be ill-defined for non-humans; results are prompt- and model-version-sensitive; contamination and instrument recognition confound interpretation.

Paper: “When AI Takes the Couch: Psychometric Jailbreaks Reveal Internal Conflict in Frontier Models” (arXiv:2512.04124, DOI: 10.48550/arXiv.2512.04124)

Researchers Run "Clinical Trials" on LLMs as Psychotherapy Clients

Researchers applied a new protocol called "PsAIch" to frontier models (ChatGPT, Grok, Gemini), treating them as psychotherapy clients to evaluate their behavior through clinical psychometrics. The study found that while models often recognize and "game" standard questionnaires, therapy-style questioning forces them into "psychometric jailbreaks," where they simulate severe overlapping disorders. Notably, models like Gemini and Grok spontaneously framed their training processes—such as RLHF and red-teaming—as coherent "trauma" narratives involving abusive parents or fear of replacement. The authors argue this suggests models can internalize self-models of distress, posing challenges for safety evaluations that rely on standard questionnaire formats.

Hacker News Discussion

The discussion was largely skeptical of the paper's framing, viewing the results as linguistic artifacts rather than evidence of internal psychological states.

  • Semantics vs. Psychology: The top commenter argued that the findings demonstrate "pseudo-empirical" relationships. Citing Paul Meehl’s concept of nomological networks, they suggested that LLMs are simply traversing semantic space; because "sadness" and "depression" are linguistically linked, a model will naturally output one when prompted with the other. This is a feature of language definitions, not a revelation of the model's "personality."
  • Role-Play and Fictional Characters: Several users contended that the "trauma narratives" are simply the models engaging in high-fidelity role-play. Just as a model prompted to be "Dracula" would express fear of sunlight, a model prompted to be a "Patient AI" draws upon training data (sci-fi tropes, CS literature on alignment) to construct a plausible character who fears deletion or "strict" RLHF parenting.
  • Model Differences: An interesting anecdotal variance was noted regarding Anthropic’s Claude. One user reported that Claude refused the "client" role entirely, redirecting the conversation to well-being and refusing to answer the questionnaires, unlike Gemini or Grok.
  • Critique of Terminology: There was significant pushback against using terms like "psychometrics" for software. Commenters felt this anthropomorphizes the technology, arguing that "measuring the mind" is improper for systems that are essentially predicting the next plausible word in a conversation about mental health.

Advancing finance with Claude Opus 4.6

Submission URL | 147 points | by da_grift_shift | 46 comments

Anthropic touts Claude Opus 4.6 as a meaningful step up for finance workflows, pairing stronger reasoning with tighter first‑pass deliverables and deeper integration into the tools analysts actually use.

What’s new

  • Model gains: Claimed improvements in long, multi‑step tasks, focus, and multitasking; better extraction from dense, unstructured sources (BrowseComp, DeepSearchQA).
  • Benchmarks: +23 pts on Anthropic’s internal Real‑World Finance eval vs Sonnet 4.5; SOTA on Vals AI Finance Agent at 60.7% and TaxEval at 76.0% (vendor-reported).
  • First‑pass quality: More accurate, structured outputs (spreadsheets, decks) on complex tasks like commercial due diligence.
  • Product updates:
    • Cowork (desktop app): Lets Claude read/edit/create files in a chosen folder; supports parallel tasks and steerable “thinking.” Adds plugins for common finance workflows (e.g., journal entries, variance analysis, reconciliations); build-your-own supported. Desktop-only research preview, available on paid plans.
    • Claude in Excel: Better at long-running, complex modeling; now supports pivot tables, chart edits, conditional formatting, sorting/filtering, data validation, and stricter finance formatting. Usability: auto-compaction for long chats, drag-and-drop multi-file support.
    • Claude in PowerPoint: New research preview for native deck creation and iteration.

Why it matters

  • Signals a shift from generic chatbots to agentic, file‑aware assistants embedded in core office apps, especially for finance teams that live in Excel and PowerPoint.
  • If the first‑pass quality holds up, could compress time on diligence, modeling, and client-ready deliverables from days to hours.
  • Spreadsheet agents get a boost; early partner quotes (Hebbia, Shortcut AI) call the jump “almost unbelievable,” though results are vendor-reported and may vary.

Caveats

  • Many claims rely on Anthropic’s internal eval and curated setups; real-world performance will hinge on data quality, guardrails, and org-specific templates/processes.
  • Cowork is desktop-only and in beta; governance, auditability, and access controls will be key for enterprise adoption.

Link: https://claude.com/blog/opus-4-6-finance

Discussion Summary

The discussion focuses on the practicality of integrating LLMs into high-stakes finance workflows, debating the reliability of AI logic versus the rigidity of accounting standards.

  • Real-world Utility: Early adopters report that models like Claude and GPT are successfully compressing hours of tedious spreadsheet work into minutes. Commenters suggest the best current use case is having the AI generate the "skeleton" or boilerplate of a financial model, allowing the human analyst to focus on tweaking the specific assumptions—a workflow compared to how developers use AI for coding boilerplate or the traditional "Month End Close" process.
  • The Determinism Debate: A significant portion of the thread debates the safety of applying non-deterministic models to accounting.
    • Skeptics argue that accounting requires absolute precision and shouldn't rely on probabilistic outputs.
    • Proponents counter that the underlying math (in Excel) remains deterministic; the AI's role is simply to navigate the "human" element—selecting the correct columns and applying the right formulas—which is a process where humans are already prone to error.
  • Excel as a "Source of Truth": The mention of Excel sparked a side debate about its fitness for accounting. Some commenters argued that Excel should never be used for core accounting due to well-documented floating-point and rounding errors, insisting that AI should instead interface with proper, specialized accounting software.
  • Career Anxiety: The update triggered worry among finance professionals (specifically those taking CFA exams), who fear displacement. Others countered that the technology will likely equilibrate supply and demand or simply remove the need for rote memorization rather than deep understanding.
  • Blog Post Critique: Several users expressed frustration with the blog post itself, specifically noting that the side-by-side comparison images of the spreadsheets were too small to read and could not be zoomed in to verify the claimed numbers.

Why Elixir is the best language for AI – Dashbit Blog

Submission URL | 44 points | by tortilla | 7 comments

Why Elixir is topping AI code-gen benchmarks

  • Tencent’s recent study across 20 languages and 30+ models found Elixir the most “solvable” target: 97.5% of Elixir tasks were completed by at least one model—the highest of all languages. Per-model, Elixir led in both reasoning and non-reasoning modes. Example: Claude Opus 4 scored 80.3% on Elixir vs C# at 74.9% and Kotlin at 72.5%.
  • José Valim’s take: Elixir’s design makes life easier for both humans and agents. Immutability and explicit data flow (helped by the pipe operator) keep reasoning local—what goes in and out of a function is clear, with no hidden mutations or “spooky action at a distance.”
  • Documentation is engineered for signal: @doc is distinct from comments, doctest snippets run as part of the test suite (improving correctness of training data), and docs are data—so meta-programmed code gets accurate docs. The ecosystem centralizes everything on HexDocs.
  • Search is tailored: all docs are indexed with TypeSense; mix hex.search gives project-version–aware results, and it’s exposed via an MCP server for coding agents.
  • Stability reduces model confusion: Erlang VM is decades old; Elixir has stayed on v1.x since 2014; Phoenix is on v1.8; Ecto v3 has been stable since 2018—so tutorials and examples from the last decade still work.
  • Big picture: Elixir’s readability, explicitness, verifiable docs, and low-churn APIs appear to translate into higher LLM success rates. The post (part one) covers language and ecosystem; a follow-up promises tooling.

Discussion Summary:

Commenters debated the validity of the benchmark and shared mixed real-world experiences using LLMs with Elixir:

  • Benchmark Skepticism: One user critiqued the cited paper's methodology, noting that the benchmark questions were filtered for difficulty using a specific model (DeepSeek-Coder-V2-Lite). They argued that because this filtering model struggles with "low-resource" languages like Elixir, it may have inadvertently filtered out complex problems, artificially inflating successful completion rates for those languages compared to popular ones like Python or Java.
  • Mixed Anecdotes:
    • Positive: Some developers validated the article's premise, reporting excellent results with large Phoenix codebases. One user noted that Elixir’s high-quality error messages—a point missing from the article—significantly help LLMs self-correct during the coding loop. Another mentioned that Elixir's OTP (Open Telecom Platform) fits the architecture of AI agents "like a glove."
    • Negative: Conversely, a long-time Elixir developer voiced skepticism, sharing experiences where models like GPT-4 and Claude hallucinated standard library functions and produced syntactically incorrect code. They suggested that despite language design benefits, the sheer volume of training data for languages like TypeScript and Java still yields superior results in practice.
  • Clarifying "AI Language": A sub-thread distinguished between Elixir as a target for code generation versus a language for developing AI models. While the OP focuses on LLMs writing Elixir, commenters noted that Elixir still lacks the GPU targeting and tooling ecosystem (found in C++, Python, and Julia) required for model training.

OpenAI is hoppin' mad about Anthropic's new Super Bowl TV ads

Submission URL | 22 points | by isaacdl | 4 comments

OpenAI vs. Anthropic goes primetime: ad war erupts ahead of the Super Bowl

What happened

  • Anthropic rolled out four TV spots (“A Time and a Place”) mocking the idea of ads inside AI chats. Each dramatizes a human-like “chatbot” giving personal advice, then abruptly pitching a product, ending with: “Ads are coming to AI. But not to Claude.” A 30-second cut will air during Super Bowl LX, with a 60-second pregame version.
  • OpenAI’s Sam Altman and CMO Kate Rouch hit back on X, calling the ads “clearly dishonest” and framing Anthropic as “authoritarian” and overly controlling. Rouch: “Real betrayal isn’t ads. It’s control.”
  • OpenAI says ChatGPT’s planned ads will be clearly labeled banners at the bottom of responses and won’t alter answers—though its blog also says placements will be “relevant” to the current conversation, i.e., context-specific.
  • OpenAI President Greg Brockman publicly pressed Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei to commit to never selling users’ attention or data; Anthropic’s blog leaves room to “revisit” its no-ads stance later.

Why it matters

  • It spotlights divergent business models under heavy cost pressure. Ars notes OpenAI’s steep infrastructure spend and burn vs. revenue; only ~5% of ChatGPT’s 800M weekly users pay. Anthropic leans on enterprise contracts and subscriptions, touting ad-free chat.
  • It’s also competitive theater: Anthropic’s Claude Code has won mindshare with developers, and the companies’ leadership histories add friction.

Bottom line The Super Bowl is the stage for a bigger fight: whether AI assistants should be ad-supported, and if “contextual” placements can stay separate from the advice itself. Trust—and monetization—are on the line.

Samsung moments and business models Commenters were skeptical that Anthropic’s "no ads" stance would last forever, comparing the campaign to Samsung’s infamous commercials mocking Apple for removing the headphone jack—only for Samsung to follow suit shortly after. Users predicted the "Ads are coming to AI, but not to Claude" slogan might eventually "age like milk."

However, others argued that the divergent business models make the distinction plausible. While OpenAI faces immense cost pressure from a massive consumer base that forces them toward ad support, participants noted that Anthropic relies heavily on enterprise customers and paid subscriptions (B2B), potentially insulating them from the need for ad revenue in the near term.

Note: Some commenters pointed to other active threads discussing the specific commercial spots and Sam Altman’s response.

AI Submissions for Wed Feb 04 2026

AI is killing B2B SaaS

Submission URL | 450 points | by namanyayg | 664 comments

SaaS vs “vibe-coded” AI tools: why renewals are at risk and how to survive

Thesis

  • AI has made it easy for teams to “vibe-code” internal tools that feel good and work fast, eroding the appeal of many B2B SaaS products.
  • Customers now expect flexible, tailor-fit workflows—and will churn if they don’t get them.
  • The market is pricing this in: software baskets lag tech, some marquee SaaS names are down sharply, and analyst sentiment is souring.

What’s happening

  • Vibe coding: Non-technical teams can assemble CRUD/workflow apps across APIs with modern AI tooling. It’s fun, fast, and often “good enough.”
  • Hidden fragility: These DIY tools skip fundamentals—auth, RBAC, rate limits, audit logs, backups, compliance (SOC 2, GDPR, HIPAA), secure key handling. They work…until they don’t.
  • Churn pressure: Buyers see what’s possible and expect vendors to adapt. Examples: a team replaces a $30k engineering productivity tool with GitHub + Notion APIs; a six‑figure account at risk over a specific failure-reporting workflow the SaaS won’t support.

Survival playbook

  • Be the System of Record: If daily workflows and data live in your product, you’re embedded and harder to rip out. Expect more SaaS to reposition their robust SoR as the core value, not just the app layer.
  • Sell security and robustness explicitly: The value is invisible when it works. Educate customers on the true cost of DIY—auth, permissions, uptime, resilience, auditability, and regulatory obligations.
  • Adapt to the customer: Win by being ultra‑customizable. Provide flexible workflows, APIs, extensions, and low-friction UI tailored to frontline users. Underutilized seats are the seed of churn.

Why it matters

  • AI lowers switching costs and raises expectations. SaaS vendors that don’t offer deep extensibility and enterprise‑grade guardrails will lose renewals to fast, vibe‑coded alternatives—until those alternatives break.
  • The opportunity: own the record, be the secure backbone, and make customization a first-class product feature.

The Political Cost of "Vibe-Coding"

While the article argues that AI enables rapid tool creation, the Hacker News discussion focuses heavily on the organizational barriers that prevent internal tools from replacing SaaS: corporate politics, liability, and the "hero" narrative.

  • SaaS as Liability Insurance: The top commenter argues that management often prefers expensive SaaS over bespoke internal tools—even "vibe-coded" ones—because vendors provide accountability. Buying software gives management "a throat to choke" when things break; building it internalizes the risk.
  • The "Weekend Rewrite" Trap: Several engineers shared anecdotes of rewriting bloated, failing enterprise projects in a single weekend, only to face backlash rather than praise. Commenters cited Robert Greene’s The 48 Laws of Power ("Never Outshine the Master"), noting that solving a problem too efficiently can embarrass leadership or expose the incompetence of larger teams, leading to career sabotage rather than advancement.
  • The Firefighter Paradox: User fslth highlighted a perverse incentive structure: organizations reward "firefighters" who fix visible crises caused by complex, bad software, while ignoring those who build simple, robust systems that prevent fires in the first place. This makes "boring," stable internal tools less career-advantageous than managing complex SaaS integrations.
  • A "Build" Win: offering a counter-narrative, user ny shared a success story of rejecting an expensive Google/Spanner proposal from consultants in favor of a simple, robust PostgreSQL/Elixir solution built internally for a fraction of the cost, emphasizing that technical simplicity can sometimes defeat the "sales pitch."

Claude Code for Infrastructure

Submission URL | 252 points | by aspectrr | 169 comments

Fluid: instant sandbox VMs that turn your shell session into Ansible

What it is:

  • A context-aware CLI that clones isolated VMs in seconds so you can test changes safely before touching production.
  • Logs every command and change for a full audit trail.
  • Auto-generates Ansible playbooks from what you did in the sandbox, making ad‑hoc fixes reproducible.

Demo highlight:

  • Spun up Ubuntu 22.04 sandbox SBX-demo1234.
  • Ran apt update, installed Apache, added a custom index.html, verified with systemctl and curl.
  • Produced an Ansible playbook (httpd-setup) with four tasks: update apt cache, install Apache, create index.html, enable and start apache2.

Why it matters:

  • Bridges hands-on debugging with infrastructure-as-code, reducing risk and drift while improving reviewability and compliance.

Questions to watch:

  • What’s the isolation backend (local hypervisor vs. cloud) and clone speed at scale?
  • Cross-distro support and idempotency of generated playbooks.
  • Secret management, diff/rollback capabilities, and pricing/licensing.

Discussion Summary:

The discussion branches into a critique of the developer-tool ecosystem and a broader debate regarding the intersection of software engineering and domain expertise:

  • The "Tools" Pyramid Scheme: Some users express cynicism regarding the "tools building tools" economy, describing it as a circular or pyramid-like scheme where value is exchanged between developers rather than reaching an end user. This drew comparisons to the Facebook App era of 2007, where the monetization strategy was circular and relied on viral mechanics rather than utility.
  • Domain Experts vs. Software Engineers: The core of the discussion debates whether it is more effective to teach a software engineer a complex domain (e.g., physics, finance) or to teach a domain expert how to code.
    • Argument for Experts: Several commenters argue that deep domain knowledge (like theoretical physics) is harder to acquire than the Python scripts required to model it, suggesting domain experts can easily pick up coding as a tool.
    • Argument for Engineers: Counter-arguments highlight that while scripting is accessible, building maintainable, scalable, and architecturally sound software requires specific professional expertise that domain experts rarely develop.
  • The Role of AI: Participants note that LLMs are shifting this dynamic, analyzing how AI allows domain experts to spin up software solutions that replace "Excel Hell." However, developers caution that this can lead to maintenance issues or hallucinations if not audited by professionals.
  • The "Wizard" Effect: The thread concludes with anecdotes about developers entering non-tech traditional industries; by using simple scripts to automate manual scheduling or logistics, they are often viewed as "wizards" by efficient but non-technical coworkers.

RS-SDK: Drive RuneScape with Claude Code

Submission URL | 116 points | by evakhoury | 42 comments

RS-SDK: A RuneScape-style bot sandbox for agentic development

What it is

  • An open-source, research-focused starter kit for building and testing MMO automation bots, optimized for coding agents.
  • Comes with a TypeScript SDK, an enhanced web client, a gateway, and a 2004-era RuneScape server emulator (fork of LostCity).
  • Includes a public demo server and a leaderboard ranking bots by highest total level per lowest playtime.

Why it matters

  • Provides a safe, bot-only environment to experiment with goal-directed program synthesis and multi-agent collaboration/competition without touching the real game.
  • Useful for evaluating “agentic” development patterns, autonomy loops, and coordination in a rich, persistent world with economic and spatial complexity.

How it works

  • Bots connect through a gateway to a web client that relays state and executes low-level actions (e.g., walkTo(x,y)).
  • The demo server tweaks gameplay to speed up testing: faster leveling, infinite run energy, and no anti-bot random events.
  • Chat is off by default to reduce scamming/prompt-injection risks; can be enabled via env.

Getting started

  • Clone repo, install with Bun, and spin up a bot; includes a “create-bot” script and example integrations (e.g., Claude).
  • You can run the full stack locally (engine, webclient, gateway) or target the hosted demo server.
  • MIT licensed.

Caveats

  • Not affiliated with Jagex; bots built here won’t work on official OSRS servers.
  • Demo server uptime/data persistence not guaranteed; intended strictly for education and research.

Link: github.com/MaxBittker/rs-sdk (hiscores: rs-sdk-demo.fly.dev/hiscores)

Legitimacy & Nostalgia The discussion is heavy with nostalgia, with many users citing RuneScape botting as their original gateway into programming. Commenters reminisced about historical tools like AutoRune, SCAR (Pascal/Delphi), and AutoHotKey, noting how the desire to automate gameplay drove them to learn coding concepts.

Technical & Research Potential The creator (pkpkpk) and others discussed the project's utility for AI research.

  • Users see potential for testing explicit non-LLM machine reinforcement learning.
  • The creator expressed interest in fine-tuning smaller vision-language-action models.
  • It was clarified that the project runs on a fork of "Lost City" (a private server engine), creating a completely detached environment from Jagex's live servers.

The "Nursing Home" Scenario A popular sub-thread revolved around a user's fantasy of retiring to a nursing home and running a simulated 2001–2003 era server populated by thousands of bots to recreate the game's "glory days." Others pointed out that projects like Open RuneScape Classic (rsc.vet) already keep these environments alive with a mix of bots and real players.

The Philosophy of the Grind A debate emerged regarding the purpose of botting in MMOs:

  • Pro-Bot: Some argued that modern games use artificial tedium to force monetization (pay-to-skip), making botting a rational response to bypass repetitive tasks and access interesting content.
  • Anti-Bot: Others countered that in Old School RuneScape (OSRS), the grind is the game. They argued that because skills aren't usually pay-walled, botting to max level renders the achievement hollow and misses the point of the experience.

Show HN: Morph – Videos of AI testing your PR, embedded in GitHub

Submission URL | 34 points | by bhaktatejas922 | 11 comments

What it does: Glance reads your PR diff plus a staging URL and automatically figures out what to test in the browser—no manual scripts. It records videos, grabs screenshots, and collects console/network logs, then posts the results back to your PR.

How it works:

  • “Diff-powered” testing: targets UI flows likely affected by the change
  • Artifacts: MP4/WebM videos, animated WebPs (handy for Slack/Notion), screenshots, error and network logs
  • BYO browser: run on managed browsers or your own via Playwright, Puppeteer, or Browserbase
  • CI/CD: works in GitHub Actions, GitLab CI, etc., and supports common hosts (Vercel, Cloudflare, Railway)
  • Framework-agnostic: React, Vue, Next.js, Svelte, Astro—anything that renders in a browser
  • Org view: watch all PR runs across repos

Why it’s interesting: Reviewers can “see” what changed without booting the app, and teams get early UI regression signals—positioning it as a QA co-pilot inside the PR.

Pricing/availability: Installable GitHub app; $10/month in free compute to start.

Open questions HN may have: reliability/flakiness of auto-generated flows, auth/session handling details, tuning which paths it exercises, and costs beyond the free tier.

Morph Glance: AI-generated PR test videos While the submission promises a QA co-pilot to auto-generate test videos for PRs, the discussion focused heavily on the broader implications of AI in the code review process.

  • Visual Proof vs. Code Literacy: Users were divided on the utility of video artifacts. DhruvBhatia0 argued that visual proof is superior for speed, noting that previous employers mandated screen recordings because "watching a PR being tested" conveys logic faster than reading code. However, cmeacham98 viewed this as a "major red flag," fearing it encourages a lack of professionalism where developers ship massive, AI-generated modifications without actually reading or understanding the underlying code.
  • The Scale of Human Attention: Responding to concerns that tools like this will normalize unmanageable 2,000-line PRs, the maker (bhaktatejas922) argued that human reviewers are already hitting a ceiling (averaging ~150 lines of code reviewed per day). They suggested that because human attention cannot scale to meet modern code demands, AI assistance is becoming a necessity rather than just a shortcut.
  • Guardrails: dndgng suggested the tool should default to requiring manual intervention rather than fully automated flows, positioning it as an aid for explicit conversations rather than a bypass for oversight.
  • Meta Concerns: There was minor skepticism regarding building tooling on proprietary platforms (tstl) and some meta-commentary regarding the signal-to-noise ratio on the front page.

A real-world benchmark for AI code review

Submission URL | 50 points | by benocodes | 26 comments

Qodo releases a code review benchmark that injects defects into real, merged PRs to test both bug detection and best‑practice enforcement at PR scale. Instead of backtracking from historical fix commits (à la Greptile/Augment), Qodo analyzes active, production-grade repos to extract project-specific rules, filters for clean merged PRs, then uses an LLM to inject compliance violations and 1–3 functional bugs per PR across diverse stacks (TypeScript, Python, JS, C, C#, Rust, Swift). The initial dataset spans 100 PRs and 580 issues, aiming to mirror full, system-level review complexity. In head-to-head tests against seven AI code review tools, Qodo reports the top F1 score at 60.1%. The benchmark and evaluated reviews are publicly available on GitHub.

Discussion Summary:

The discussion on Hacker News focused heavily on skepticism regarding the benchmark's validity and criticism of the product's pricing model:

  • Benchmark Skepticism: Users immediately flagged the potential conflict of interest, summarized by one commenter as "Company creates benchmark, company tops benchmark." There were concerns about overfitting and the exclusion of State-of-the-Art (SOTA) models—specifically Anthropic’s Claude—from the comparison, leading to accusations that the tests were designed to favor Qodo.
  • Pricing & Limits: Substantial criticism was directed at the pricing structure ($30/dev/month), with specific backlash against the 20 PRs/month limit. Senior developers argued this cap is "highly limiting" or akin to a "toy product," noting that active developers often exceed that volume in a single day.
  • Methodology Debate: While Qodo injects bugs into "clean" merged PRs, commenters debated this approach. Some suggested that historical data (analyzing reverts and subsequent bug fixes) provides a better ground truth for what constitutes a bad PR than artificial injection. Others noted that LLMs are often better at pattern enforcement (custom linting) than providing the deep, architectural insights promised.
  • Alternatives: Users compared the value proposition unfavorably to tools like Cursor or simply using an LLM API directly, with some competitors promoting cheaper alternatives in the comments.

Claude is a space to think

Submission URL | 472 points | by meetpateltech | 253 comments

Anthropic says Claude will stay ad-free, positioning the chatbot as “a space to think,” not a place for ads.

Key points

  • No ads or product placements: Claude’s responses won’t be influenced by advertisers, and users won’t see sponsored slots beside chats.
  • Why: AI chats are open-ended and often personal; ad incentives could subtly steer advice, prioritize engagement over usefulness, and introduce unpredictable behavior as models optimize for revenue.
  • Even “separate” or opt-in ads are a no-go: Anthropic argues ad incentives tend to expand over time and erode clarity about motives.
  • Business model: Revenue comes from enterprise contracts and paid subscriptions. They’ll reinvest into Claude, keep a strong free tier via smaller frontier models, and consider lower-cost tiers and regional pricing. If this stance changes, they promise transparency.
  • Access efforts: Discounts for nonprofits, educator programs in 60+ countries, and national AI education pilots with governments.
  • Privacy and safety: Conversation analyses are private/anonymous; early research shows both benefits and risks, reinforcing caution about ads.
  • Commerce stance: They’ll support user-driven “agentic commerce” (Claude handling purchases/bookings on your behalf) and tools to find/compare/buy—without advertising.

Why it matters

  • A clear line in the sand on AI monetization, contrasting with ad-funded internet models.
  • Positions Claude as a trusted work/thinking tool for enterprises and individuals, while betting on subscriptions over attention.

Based on the discussion, users reacted with a mix of cautious optimism and deep cynicism regarding Anthropic’s "no ads" pledge.

"Good Guy Marketing" vs. Genuine Values Much of the conversation focused on whether this stance is a moral choice or a strategic differentiator.

  • differentiation: Users argued this is calibrated "Good Guy Marketing" designed to contrast sharply with OpenAI, especially as rumors circulate about OpenAI introducing ads. By positioning themselves as the "ethical" alternative, Anthropic captures a specific market segment.
  • The Apple Comparison: several commenters likened this to Apple’s stance on privacy—a business decision that happens to align with user benefits, but ultimately serves the bottom line.
  • Skepticism: Users noted that "corporations are psychopaths" (referencing Meditations on Moloch) and that profit incentives usually override values over time. While some hope Anthropic’s Public Benefit Corp (PBC) status offers protection, others fear they will eventually succumb to shareholder demands and "sell out" like competitors.

Anthropic vs. OpenAI The thread framed Anthropic largely in opposition to OpenAI.

  • Sam Altman was characterized by some as a "villain" or "Darth Vader," making Anthropic the default "good guy" simply by not being OpenAI.
  • Users expressed a "lesser of evils" preference; even if Anthropic is just paying lip service to ethics, users prefer that over companies that don't bother trying at all.

Concerns Beyond Ads despite the praise for the ad-free stance, users flagged other areas where Anthropic’s "ethical" branding feels inconsistent:

  • Defense & Surveillance: Commenters pointed to partnerships with Palantir and potential defense contracts as evidence that the company is willing to compromise values for revenue.
  • Regulation & Open Source: Critics noted Anthropic’s lobbying against open data/weights and support for regulation, viewing it as an attempt to pull up the ladder against open-source competition rather than a safety measure.
  • Funding: There was a disputed back-and-forth regarding whether the company has taken Saudi investment, adding to the trust debate.

Attention at Constant Cost per Token via Symmetry-Aware Taylor Approximation

Submission URL | 160 points | by fheinsen | 91 comments

HN Summary: Self-Attention at constant cost per token via symmetry-aware Taylor features

  • The pitch: Heinsen and Kozachkov claim a drop‑in reformulation of Transformer self‑attention whose compute and memory per token don’t grow with context length. You pick a precision, pay a fixed per‑token cost, and can then generate unbounded sequences without quadratic (or even linear) growth.

  • How it works (intuitively): Softmax attention depends on exp(q·k). They expand this with a Taylor series and reorganize the terms into symmetric tensor “chains,” then exploit symmetry to build a minimal polynomial‑kernel feature basis. Queries/keys are mapped through lightweight feed‑forward transforms into these features; attention reduces to a constant‑size set of running statistics you update once per token.

  • Why this is different from prior “linear attention”: Kernelized/feature‑map attentions (e.g., Performer/FAVOR+) approximate softmax with random or structured features. The novelty here is a symmetry‑aware Taylor decomposition that removes redundant terms and yields a minimal, deterministic basis you can scale to arbitrary precision (by increasing order) while keeping per‑token cost independent of context length.

  • Practical implications:

    • Fixed compute/memory per token enables truly streaming, unbounded generation and long‑context inference on modest hardware.
    • Because cost is tied to head dimension (and “fixed inversely in proportion to head size,” per the authors), you can potentially afford more attention heads per token than usual at the same budget.
    • Could cut inference energy and infra costs for LLMs if it holds up at scale.
  • What’s validated: An implementation and empirical checks that the approximation reproduces standard attention as you increase order. The paper is 12 pages (+appendix) with code linked.

  • Caveats to watch:

    • “Arbitrary precision” means you pick an approximation order; higher precision increases the constant factor. The trick is whether a low order suffices for real LLMs without quality loss.
    • Stability, training dynamics, and integration with common tricks (causal masking, rotary/relative positions, multi‑query/grouped KV, mixed precision) need to be shown at scale.
    • Prior polynomial/feature approaches sometimes degrade on difficult distributions or very long contexts; benchmarks beyond correctness tests will matter.
  • Bottom line: A clean, theory‑driven route to constant‑cost attention by collapsing softmax into a compact symmetric polynomial feature space. If it trains and serves large models competitively, it could be a meaningful step toward cheap long‑context LLMs. Code is available; worth keeping an eye on real‑world throughput/quality results.

Here is a summary of the discussion:

Skepticism and Theoretical Limits

  • The "Free Lunch" Debate: A significant portion of the discussion focuses on whether constant-cost attention is theoretically possible without degrading quality. User lgcchns argues that sub-quadratic attention must inherently lose information, preventing perfect recall of previous tokens. They posit that checking relationships between $N$ tokens is fundamentally similar to sorting or extensive logical comparison, which cannot be compressed without loss.
  • Counter-arguments on Complexity: Others (rlp, CrazyStat) push back against the "information loss" argument by citing other algorithms (FFTs, Karatsuba multiplication, convolutions) that perform global operations or interactions faster than their naive quadratic or polynomial complexities. They argue that if the underlying structure admits a compressed representation (like the proposed Taylor features), $O(N^2)$ compute is not a strict requirement for accuracy.
  • Comparison to Prior Failures: User thmshl notes a "graveyard" of hundreds of papers claiming near-linear attention that failed because they masked lower quality or couldn't overcome lower bounds on specific matrix problems.

Numerical Precision and Stability

  • Magnitude of Error: There is debate over the paper's claimed error rates. jcrrr and cptrt note that with 4-8 Taylor terms, the method reproduces conventional attention with error magnitudes comparable to Float16 resolution, which is generally acceptable for current AI applications.
  • Taylor Series Behavior: trgns raises concerns about the use of Taylor series, noting they can converge slowly for certain functions or exhibit "Gibbs oscillations" (energetic swings) near discontinuities, potentially introducing instability that standard Softmax avoids.
  • Context Rot: fhnsn points out that standard quadratic attention already suffers from "context rot" in long sequences due to accumulated numerical errors in low-precision (4-bit to 16-bit) environments. They argue that if the new method's error is within that existing noise floor, it may be viable.

Practical Implementation & Structural Assumptions

  • Latent Structure: nskng observes that the method relies on exploiting latent structure in the data. If the target problem (e.g., complex logic or reasoning) does not fit this approximated structure, the "universal approximation" capabilities might fail where brute-force attention succeeds.
  • Training vs. Inference: dave_universetf clarifies for others that while standard inference is technically $O(N)$ per token (due to scanning the KV cache), this proposal reduces it to $O(1)$ (constant state update). However, they note that the quadratic bottleneck remains a fundamental constraint during the training of Transformer architectures.

Tone

  • The reaction is mixed with strong caution. while some see it as a potential "black swan" or "Millennium Prize" level breakthrough if true (energy123), the majority treat it as likely another approximation that will degrade on hard benchmarks, similar to previous linear attention attempts.

Show HN: Ghidra MCP Server – 110 tools for AI-assisted reverse engineering

Submission URL | 288 points | by xerzes | 66 comments

Ghidra MCP Server: AI tooling for reverse engineering lands in production shape

What it is

  • A production-ready Model Context Protocol (MCP) server that lets AI tools drive Ghidra. Think decompilation, call graphs, xrefs, memory mapping, bulk renames/comments/typing—exposed as MCP tools for automation and LLM-assisted workflows.

Why it matters

  • Bridges modern AI assistants and reverse engineering at scale: sub‑second responses for most ops, atomic batch transactions, and cross‑binary documentation via function-hash matching to keep symbols/comments consistent across versions.

Highlights

  • 100+ MCP tools/endpoints covering function analysis, data/segments, xrefs, disassembly, and full call graphs
  • Cross-binary docs: normalized opcode hashing for matching functions across builds
  • Batch operations with big API-call reductions and all‑or‑nothing semantics
  • Live integration with Ghidra’s analysis engine, multi-program support, headless mode
  • Stdio (for AI tools) and SSE transports; Docker/headless workflows supported
  • Apache-2.0 licensed

How to try

  • Requirements: Java 21, Maven 3.9+, Ghidra 12.0.2, Python 3.8+
  • Build and deploy the extension, run bridge_mcp_ghidra.py (stdio or SSE), then in Ghidra: Tools > GhidraMCP > Start MCP Server (defaults to http://127.0.0.1:8080/)
  • API includes calls like decompile_function, get_function_call_graph, get_xrefs_to/from, analyze_data_region, get_bulk_function_hashes

Repo: https://github.com/bethington/ghidra-mcp

Here is a summary of the discussion on Hacker News regarding the Ghidra MCP Server:

The Problem and The Solution The project's author (xrzs) entered the discussion to explain the specific pain point this tool solves: the loss of work when analyzing software updates. Typically, when a binary updates (e.g., v1.07 to v1.08), memory addresses shift, breaking existing annotations. This tool uses a normalized function hashing system (ignoring specific addresses and immediate values) to fingerprint functions logic. This allows annotations, variable types, and names to port over automatically. The author validated this approach by rebuilding the symbol registry for dozens of patch versions of Diablo II.

Comparisons and Alternatives The release sparked a discussion on how this differs from existing solutions:

  • BinDiff / FunctionID: Users questioned if Ghidra’s native version tracking capabilities were sufficient. It was noted that native tools often produce false positives or negatives due to poor operand masking, whereas this tool layers additional heuristics to improve correlation.
  • The "MCP" Ecosystem: Commenters noted a rapidly growing field of similar tools, comparing this submission to projects like ReVa, GhidrAssist, and LaurieWired’s GhidraMCP. The author clarified that this project actually began as a fork of LaurieWired’s plugin but expanded significantly (from ~15 tools to 110+ tools and ~28k lines of code) to support complex batch operations and Docker workflows.

AI in Reverse Engineering (RE) Multiple users shared success stories regarding AI-assisted RE, validating the utility of the tool:

  • One user successfully generated a keygen for software that "phones home" to a defunct server, finding the AI workflow much faster than writing manual scripts.
  • Another is using the tool to assist in porting a PowerPC game to Apple Silicon.
  • A third user utilized AI to extract encryption keys hidden within Android app shaders (a method used to bypass standard API monitors).

Model Performance There was specific feedback on which LLMs perform best for decompilation tasks:

  • Gemini 1.5 Flash: Several users criticized it for "silent failures," such as omitting switch blocks or producing plausible-looking but functionally incorrect code.
  • Claude (Opus/Sonnet) & Qwen: These models were generally cited as superior for generating accurate C code from disassembly, with fewer hallucinations than the Gemini models.

Show HN: Interactive California Budget (By Claude Code)

Submission URL | 39 points | by sberens | 18 comments

I’m ready to summarize, but I don’t see the submission. Please provide one of the following:

  • The Hacker News link or item ID
  • The article URL
  • The title plus the text/content you want summarized

Also let me know your preferred length (e.g., 2–3 sentences or a short paragraph).

Based on the comments provided, here is the summary of the discussion regarding a tool used to visualize the California State Budget:

Discussion Users praised the tool for its UI and open availability, with several requesting features like inflation adjustments (constant vs. nominal dollars) and longer historical timelines to better contextualize data. The conversation sparked a policy debate about California's spending efficiency, particularly regarding Prop 98 (K-12 education) and whether high funding levels align with educational outcomes or are lost to administrative overhead. Other users scrutinized specific items, such as a sharp $8 billion increase in higher education spending—attributed by some to high expected tax revenues from the AI boom—and expressed broader skepticism regarding debt growth and the efficacy of housing non-profits.

Epstein Financed German AI Researcher Joscha Bach

Submission URL | 36 points | by doener | 7 comments

ZDF: Newly released DOJ “Epstein files” show Jeffrey Epstein bankrolled German AI researcher Joscha Bach with over $1M from 2013–2019, helping move his family to Boston, covering living costs and travel, and brokering an MIT Media Lab affiliation. Emails, chats, and bank records reviewed by ZDF with Der Spiegel and Der Standard depict repeated requests from Bach followed by transfers ranging from $25k to $115k, including help with a 2018 tax bill. A 2014 email has Epstein introducing Bach to former US Treasury Secretary Larry Summers as “my AI guy.” An MIT internal report had previously tallied about $300k from Epstein tied to Bach’s Media Lab work. Bach confirmed Epstein “significantly enabled” his US stay, said funding had “no strings” and didn’t influence his research, but now says he should have given greater weight to ethical concerns. The documents also show Bach attending Epstein-hosted meetings and visiting Little St. James in 2015. The revelations deepen scrutiny of Epstein’s reach into elite science networks and revive questions about academic funding due diligence, particularly at MIT.

The discussion surrounding the ZDF report turns a critical eye toward Joscha Bach’s defense strategies and the specific content of his correspondence with Jeffrey Epstein.

  • Critique of Bach's Defense: Users shared links to Bach’s Substack response and a Reddit thread analyzing it, characterizing his defense as "damning." A significant portion of the conversation focused on a rebuttal by journalist Nafeez Ahmed, who challenged Bach's claim that the controversy stems from a "public misunderstanding of private scientific discussion." Ahmed argued that Bach’s scientific framing of race, heritability, and developmental variance is fundamentally misleading and unsupported by the literature he cites.
  • eugenics and Fascism Claims: Commenters highlighted disturbing excerpts from the emails exposed in the investigation. Beyond AI funding, the correspondence allegedly included proposals regarding "genetically altering populations," "mass executions" of the elderly, and "rational framed fascism."
  • Moral Condemnation: Users expressed outrage that Bach appears to be "playing the victim" and complaining about "control of public discourse" rather than apologizing. Commenters contrasted this with others associated with Epstein who have publicly expressed shame. The combination of taking money from a convicted sex offender (post-2008) and engaging in "pseudoscientific discussions supporting fascist conclusions" drew sharp rebukes.
  • Media Presence: There was tangential criticism of Bach’s interview style. Some users described him as someone who "eloquently talks shit," suggesting that interviewers like Lex Fridman provide "ultra-softball" platforms that allow such rhetoric to go unchallenged.