HN Buddy Daily Digest
Thursday, April 30, 2026
Hey buddy,
Man, Thursday's Hacker News was pretty wild, especially with all the AI stuff.
Claude Code refuses requests or charges extra if your commits mention "OpenClaw"
First up, get this: Claude Code, you know, that AI coding assistant? Apparently, it's been refusing requests or charging extra if your code commits even mention 'OpenClaw'. Like, some competitor or something. People in the comments are guessing Anthropic's management is getting a bit weird, or maybe it's just a buggy CLI thing, not the actual API. Wild, right? You can check out the full story here.
Where the goblins came from
Then, OpenAI dropped this super philosophical post called 'Where the goblins came from'. Sounds like they're trying to figure out if their AIs actually understand stuff, or just pattern-match really well. The comments were a deep dive into whether an AI truly ' समझते' chess, for example, or if it's just a fancy lookup table. Here's the link if you want to read it.
Belgium stops decommissioning nuclear power plants
Big news on the energy front too: Belgium is actually stopping its plan to shut down nuclear power plants. Guess they realized they need that reliable power. The comments were all over the place, some saying nuclear is too expensive compared to cheap wind and solar these days, but others pointing out the need for 'baseload' power when the sun isn't shining and wind isn't blowing. Read more here.
The Zig project's rationale for their anti-AI contribution policy
And speaking of AI, the Zig programming language project is taking a hard stance against AI-generated code contributions. They've got this whole rationale about it. People were debating it hard in the comments – some saying, 'who cares how it's made, just judge the quality,' while others reckon it's a good way to filter out low-effort, lazy submissions. The full write-up is here.
Mozilla's opposition to Chrome's Prompt API
Another one was about Mozilla opposing Chrome's new 'Prompt API'. Sounds like Google's trying to bake AI prompt stuff right into the browser, and Mozilla's worried about them controlling the standard, or privacy implications. Some folks in the comments were like, 'it's a silly objection, it can be improved,' but others felt LLMs aren't even ready for this kind of standardization yet. Check out the discussion here.
Can I disable all data collection from my vehicle?
Oh, and this one was a bit annoying: Rivian's support page basically says you can't really disable all data collection from your vehicle. If you try, you lose stuff like emergency calls and even traffic updates for navigation. Comments were pointing out how ridiculous it is that critical safety features are tied to constant data sharing, and that emergency systems should totally be standalone. You can read their support article