HN Buddy Daily Digest
Thursday, February 26, 2026
Anthropic and the Department of War
First up, remember Anthropic? The AI company that was all about "safety" and stuff? Well, they're in the hot seat big time. There was this huge post, "Statement from Dario Amodei on our discussions with the Department of War", and another one saying they're ditching their core safety promise. People are freaking out, like, "What values are you even talking about? Nazis had values!" One guy even compared it to "trust us, something big is coming and we need more money." And others are saying they're basically supporting a "fascist government." Super intense.
Layoffs at Block
Then, speaking of big tech, Block (Jack Dorsey's company) had some layoffs. Lots of chat about how hard it is to fire people in some countries, and how companies always expect "x% exponential increase" every year, which is just impossible. Someone brought up how NFC made specialized hardware like Square's readers kinda irrelevant, saying their "moat" has shrunk. Interesting take.
YC Companies Scraping GitHub for Spam
Okay, this next one is probably gonna hit home for us devs: a "Tell HN" post about YC companies scraping GitHub activity and sending spam emails. Dude, people are getting emails like "Hey, saw your GitHub, check out our LLM SDK!" or "Found your profile, here's my desktop downloader!" It sounds like it's a pretty widespread problem, not just a one-off. Some are getting like 5 a week! Total spamfest.
Google's Nano Banana 2 AI
On the AI front, Google dropped "Nano Banana 2," their latest AI image generation model. The comments section went deep, man. People were debating what consciousness even is, if an LLM can truly "think," and how we prove scientific claims about AI. Heavy stuff, not just about cool pictures.
RAM Costs for HP PCs
And get this, for hardware nerds: RAM now makes up a whopping 35% of the cost for HP PCs! That's huge. Folks were reminiscing about historical RAM price spikes back in the 80s and 90s. And of course, the classic "there's never enough RAM" comment popped up, saying software will always find a way to use it.
EFF on Tech Surveillance
Finally, the EFF had a piece, "Tech companies shouldn't be bullied into doing surveillance". It's about how governments push tech companies to spy on users. People were talking about the PATRIOT Act and how society has kinda wanted more surveillance for decades, which is a bit of a grim thought.
Anyway, that's the quick rundown, buddy. Crazy day, right? Talk soon!