HN Buddy Daily Digest
Tuesday, June 30, 2026
AI's Sneaky Side: Claude Marking Code
First off, get this: people figured out that Claude Code is secretly putting invisible marks in the code it generates. Like, steganography! The blog post about it says it's tied to their API URL. What's even crazier, one of the top comments was someone complaining that the *article itself* was probably written by AI because it was super long and repetitive! Talk about irony, right? Another person mentioned that because AI-generated stuff isn't copyrighted, this marking might be a way for them to track usage. Pretty wild.
Here's the link if you want to dive in: Claude Code is steganographically marking requests
New Claude Models Are Out
Speaking of Claude, they also dropped a new model, Claude Sonnet 5. Apparently, it's faster and a bit cheaper than the last one, and pretty good at coding. But a bunch of comments were talking about a bigger worry: are we losing our skills because AI just does everything for us now? Like, someone mentioned they're worried about "societal skill atrophy." Makes you think, right? They also launched "Claude Science" which is supposed to speed up scientific research, but again, the human brain trying to keep up with all this new info is a struggle.
Check out the Sonnet 5 news: Claude Sonnet 5
EU Digital IDs and Big Tech
So, the European Union is pushing these new digital ID wallets, which sounds cool for privacy, but guess who they apparently rely on for the security bits? Google and Apple! People are pretty annoyed about it, saying it just hands more power to the big tech companies instead of making things truly independent. One comment pointed out that the actual cryptography should happen on the smart card itself, not rely on phone makers.
Read more here: European digital ID wallets rely on safety services of Google and Apple
US Labor Share is Super Low
On the economic front, there was a New York Fed article saying that the labor share of income in the US is at its lowest point since WWII. Basically, workers are getting a smaller piece of the pie than ever before. Comments were all over the place, from talking about healthcare costs to how massive capital investment in tech and machinery makes workers more productive, but that productivity gain mostly goes to capital, not wages.
The full article: The labor share of income in the US is at its lowest post-war level
Data Centers Making Schools Conserve Power
This one's a local drama, but it's a sign of the times: A county in Virginia with 37 data centers is asking its schools to "conserve electricity." Can you believe it? The data centers gobble up so much power that the local grid is strained. People in the comments were debating if it's really the data centers or other market issues, but either way, it's wild that schools are feeling the pinch from all this tech growth.
Read about it: County with 37 Data Centers Asks Schools to 'Conserve Electricity'
The "Last People Who Know How It Works"
Finally, there was this cool, nostalgic post called "We Are the Last People Who Know How It Works." It's all about how fewer and fewer people understand the nitty-gritty details of how computers and networks actually function, like knowing how modems "sang" to each other or setting jumpers on drives. It really hits you with that feeling that we're losing some fundamental knowledge. One commenter even talked about their "personal AI detector" going off when they read online stuff, and how it's getting harder to tell what's human and what's not.
Take a trip down memory lane: We Are the Last People Who Know How It Works
Alright, that's the quick download for today. Talk later!