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

Friday, November 14, 2025

Hey buddy,

Man, Friday on Hacker News had some wild stuff. Lemme quickly run through the highlights:

Firefox and AI Shenanigans

First up, there's this huge thread about Firefox and AI. Apparently, nobody wants AI crammed into their browser, and people are just fed up with Mozilla trying to find new ways to make money. It's kinda like when they tried Firefox OS or that Mr. Robot thing a while back. The comments are all about how Mozilla just can't figure out how to fund itself without annoying its users. People are pretty annoyed, seems like a pattern.

AI Can't Tell Time

Then there's this super interesting one about AI World Clocks. It's basically a bunch of clocks generated by AI, and they're all messed up – numbers are wrong, hands are weird. It really highlights how these AIs, despite seeming smart, can't even tell time consistently. Someone in the comments even compared it to how clocks look in lucid dreams, all distorted and unreliable! Pretty wild to see AI struggle with something so basic.

EU Chat Control Sneaks Back

Big privacy alert for our EU friends: 'EU Chat Control' is apparently back, but disguised. It's about scanning private messages, which, obviously, everyone's freaking out about. One comment said it's like the 'boiled frog' situation, where privacy just slowly erodes over time without people realizing until it's too late. Yikes.

AGI Dreams vs. Real Engineering

Speaking of AI, there's this article arguing that the whole 'AGI fantasy' is actually holding back real engineering. Like, instead of chasing super-smart AI, we should be solving practical problems with the tech we have now. People in the comments were talking about how we're missing opportunities in 3D reconstruction and other areas because everyone's just dreaming of AGI. Makes sense, right?

Being Poor vs. Being Broke

Shift gears a bit, there was a really thought-provoking piece called 'Being poor vs. being broke'. It talks about how being 'broke' is temporary, but 'poor' is a whole different ballgame, often a mindset and a cycle that's super hard to break. Comments really dug into the long-term psychological effects of growing up poor, even if you become well-off later. Super insightful stuff.

Messaging Without Internet

Okay, and then there's this project called 'Bitchat for Gaza', which is trying to create a way for people to message each other without internet access, using some clever tech. Obviously, the comments section got super deep into the politics of the region, as you'd expect, with a lot of debate about media bias and the conflict. It's a heavy topic.

North Korea / Antarctica VPS?!

And for something completely different and kinda wild, someone figured out 'How to Get a North Korea / Antarctica VPS'! Super niche, but it's a cool technical deep dive into how you'd even try to get a server running in places like that. The company IPinfo even jumped into the comments to explain how they track IPs and the challenges with 'adversarial geofeeds' – basically, people trying to mess with location data. Pretty wild stuff for the technically curious.

Anyway, that's the gist of it. Talk soon!

All Stories from Today

I think nobody wants AI in Firefox, Mozilla (manualdousuario.net)

AI World Clocks (clocks.brianmoore.com)

The disguised return of EU Chat Control (reclaimthenet.org)

AGI fantasy is a blocker to actual engineering (www.tomwphillips.co.uk)

Being poor vs. being broke (blog.ctms.me)

Bitchat for Gaza – messaging without internet (updates.techforpalestine.org)

Show HN: Epstein Files Organized and Searchable (searchepsteinfiles.com)

'No One Lives Forever' turns 25 and you still can't buy it legitimately (www.techdirt.com)

Winamp clone in Swift for macOS (github.com)

A race condition in Aurora RDS (hightouch.com)

Oracle hit hard in Wall Street's tech sell-off over its AI bet (www.ft.com)

Germany to ban Huawei from future 6G network (www.bloomberg.com)

How to Get a North Korea / Antarctica VPS (blog.lyc8503.net)

All praise to the lunch ladies (bittersoutherner.com)

What happened with the CIA and The Paris Review? (www.theparisreview.org)

Nvidia is gearing up to sell servers instead of just GPUs and components (www.tomshardware.com)

Backblaze Drive Stats for Q3 2025 (www.backblaze.com)

Lawmakers want to ban VPNs and have no idea what they're doing (www.eff.org)

Brexit reduced UK GDP by 6-8%, investments by 12-18% [pdf] (www.nber.org)

Go's Sweet 16 (go.dev)

HipKittens: Fast and furious AMD kernels (hazyresearch.stanford.edu)

RegreSQL: Regression Testing for PostgreSQL Queries (boringsql.com)

SSL Configuration Generator (ssl-config.mozilla.org)

Why Fei-Fei Li and Yann LeCun are both betting on "world models" (entropytown.com)

Manganese is Lyme disease's double-edge sword (news.northwestern.edu)

Linear algebra explains why some words are effectively untranslatable (aethermug.com)

Structured outputs on the Claude Developer Platform (www.claude.com)

Magit manuals are available online again (github.com)

V8 Garbage Collector (wingolog.org)

Apple Mini Apps Partner Program (developer.apple.com)