HN Buddy

Daily digest of top Hacker News posts and comments

Subscribe to the HN Buddy Daily Digest

Your email will only be used for the HN Buddy Daily Digest. I will not share it with anyone.

HN Buddy Daily Digest

Monday, April 20, 2026

Hey buddy,

You gotta hear about some of the wild stuff from Hacker News on Monday. I was just skimming through it, and there were a few things that really popped out.

Apple Shake-Up!

First off, big news from Apple. John Ternus is taking over as CEO from Tim Cook, who's gonna be the Executive Chairman now. Check out the official announcement here. People in the comments were saying Apple was super smart to get out of the EV business – apparently, it's just too expensive and not profitable enough. Someone else was talking about how Apple's hardware and software integration affects app developers, especially with future stuff like iGlasses. Wild times over there!

EU to the Rescue: Replaceable Batteries!

Then, get this: from 2027, all phones sold in the EU have to have replaceable batteries! You can read about it here. This is huge, right? People were calling it a win against "enshittification" – you know, when products just get worse over time. Some were debating if it'd slow down innovation, but mostly everyone thought it was a good move for consumers. No more throwing out a perfectly good phone just 'cause the battery died!

GitHub's Fake Stars Drama

Alright, this one's a bit spicy for us developer types: there's an investigation into GitHub's fake star economy. It's all about people buying fake stars to make their projects look more popular, kinda like buying fake followers on Instagram. The article is here. Comments were saying if commits are cheap, people will definitely game the system. Apparently, the FTC has rules against this with pretty big penalties, which is good. One comment even said that using GitHub stars as a basis for hiring is flawed thinking anyway, which, fair point.

AI is Making How Much Music?!

This statistic blew my mind: Deezer is reporting that 44% of all songs uploaded to their platform daily are AI-generated! That's almost half! You can see the TechCrunch article here. People were talking about how this could lead to "creative nihilism" – like, why even bother making stuff if AI can do it so easily and fast? It's pretty wild to think about the future of music.

Atlassian's Sneaky AI Data Collection

And speaking of AI, Atlassian (you know, Jira, Confluence) quietly enabled default data collection to train their AI models. The details are here. Naturally, people were pretty annoyed about it being opt-out instead of opt-in. Some comments were ripping on Atlassian's engineering quality and how it's actually pretty easy to export all your Jira data if you wanted to switch to something else. Not a great look for them.

More AI Models Dropping

Also, just generally, there were a couple of new AI models making waves: Kimi K2.6 (link) and Qwen3.6-Max-Preview (link). More and more powerful open-source (or "openwashed," as some comments called it – meaning they say they're open but then try to make it proprietary) models are coming out. It's a constant race, man.

The Onion Buys InfoWars (LOL)

And for a laugh, The Onion posted an article saying they finally bought InfoWars. Obviously, it's satire, but it was pretty funny given all the real-world legal stuff that's been happening. You can read the Onion article here. People in the comments were actually having serious discussions about libel and slander, even though it was an Onion piece.

Anyway, that's the quick download from Monday. Talk later!

All Stories from Today

John Ternus to become Apple CEO (www.apple.com)

All phones sold in the EU to have replaceable batteries from 2027 (www.theolivepress.es)

GitHub's fake star economy (awesomeagents.ai)

Kimi K2.6: Advancing open-source coding (www.kimi.com)

Qwen3.6-Max-Preview: Smarter, Sharper, Still Evolving (qwen.ai)

At long last, InfoWars is ours (theonion.com)

Atlassian enables default data collection to train AI (letsdatascience.com)

NSA is using Anthropic's Mythos despite blacklist (www.axios.com)

Sauna effect on heart rate (tryterra.co)

ggsql: A Grammar of Graphics for SQL (opensource.posit.co)

AI Resistance: some recent anti-AI stuff that’s worth discussing (stephvee.ca)

Deezer says 44% of songs uploaded to its platform daily are AI-generated (techcrunch.com)

Tesla concealed fatal accidents to continue testing autonomous driving (www.rts.ch)

Not buying another Kindle (www.androidauthority.com)

We accepted surveillance as default (vivianvoss.net)

The insider trading suspicions looming over Trump's presidency (www.bbc.com)

OpenClaw isn't fooling me. I remember MS-DOS (www.flyingpenguin.com)

M 7.4 earthquake – 100 km ENE of Miyako, Japan (earthquake.usgs.gov)

OpenAI ad partner now selling ChatGPT ad placements based on “prompt relevance” (www.adweek.com)

F-35 is built for the wrong war (warontherocks.com)

Kimi vendor verifier – verify accuracy of inference providers (www.kimi.com)

WebUSB Extension for Firefox (github.com)

Jujutsu megamerges for fun and profit (isaaccorbrey.com)

Claude Token Counter, now with model comparisons (simonwillison.net)

Palantir Wants to Reinstate the Draft (reason.com)

Brussels launched an age checking app. Hackers took 2 minutes to break it (www.politico.eu)

Quantum Computers Are Not a Threat to 128-Bit Symmetric Keys (words.filippo.io)

Show HN: Run TRELLIS.2 Image-to-3D generation natively on Apple Silicon (github.com)

We got 207 tok/s with Qwen3.5-27B on an RTX 3090 (github.com)

IEA: Solar overtakes all energy sources in a major global first (electrek.co)