HN Buddy Daily Digest
Tuesday, December 30, 2025
Man, you wouldn't believe the stuff that popped up on Hacker News today, December 30th. I was just scrolling through and a few things really jumped out. Lemme hit you with the highlights real quick.
Netflix Open Content
First up, Netflix is doing something kinda wild: they launched this "Open Content" thing. Basically, they're putting out a bunch of stuff like behind-the-scenes docs, educational resources, and even some content under open licenses. People in the comments were saying it's actually gonna help smaller film makers who don't have those massive Disney budgets, which is pretty cool. Someone even brought up the Chernobyl show's podcast as an example of good extra content. There was a bit of a debate too, about AI and art, and whether putting creative power in more hands is a good thing or misunderstood.
22 GB of Hacker News in SQLite
Then there was this super nerdy but also super cool "Show HN" where some dude dumped like 22 GIGABYTES of Hacker News data into a SQLite database. Imagine having all of HN history offline! People were geeking out in the comments about how he got all the data, especially comment scores which aren't usually in the API. Someone suggested using DuckDB with remote parquet files for even better handling, which sounds like next-level stuff.
Go away Python
This one had a bold title: "Go away Python." It's a blog post basically arguing that Go is better for simple scripting than Python. The comments were a battlefield, as you'd expect! A lot of folks agreed that Python's dependency management can be a nightmare – you know, when you just want to run a script and it needs 14 other packages. But others brought up how languages like Rust and Go have their own challenges with interfacing with other libraries. It was a good old language war, man.
ICC Judge Sanctioned and Debanked by US
Okay, this next one is kinda heavy. A French judge on the International Criminal Court, Nicolas Guillou, got sanctioned by the US and basically "debanked" – meaning his access to banking services was cut off. The comments were blowing up about this. People were talking about US sovereignty, international law, and the crazy power governments have to just shut down someone's finances. It really makes you think about basic human freedoms and how easily they can be impacted.
A faster heart for F-Droid
Good news for F-Droid users! They finally got a new server to speed things up. Their old one was apparently a 12-year-old server that was struggling to build Android apps. The comments had a bunch of people correcting common misconceptions about F-Droid, like how easy it is to run your own F-Droid server. It's cool to see open-source projects getting the upgrades they need.
Non-Zero-Sum Games
There was also this site, nonzerosum.games, which is all about games where everyone can win, not just one person. The comments got really deep and philosophical, talking about everything from economics as thermodynamics to Japan's declining population and what that means for society. Someone brought up the idea of "moving the stone only once" in Japanese architecture, which was a pretty cool analogy for commitment and resilience.
OpenAI's Cash Burn
And finally, The Economist published an article saying that OpenAI's massive cash burn is gonna be a huge question mark for 2026. Everyone's wondering if they can keep spending so much. The comments were all over the place: some people talked about how large losses can actually be tax shields for investors, which is a financial loophole I never even considered! Others were worried about IP rights and where OpenAI gets its training data. Someone even suggested Google let OpenAI get ahead because they were too afraid of backlash from their LLMs saying something controversial. Crazy stuff, right?
Alright man, that's the gist of it. Talk to you later!