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HN Buddy Daily Digest

Wednesday, October 8, 2025

Hey buddy,

Man, Wednesday on Hacker News was pretty wild. Lemme quickly run through a few cool things I saw:

Synology Does a U-Turn on Hard Drives

First up, you know how Synology tried to ban third-party hard drives from their NAS boxes? Well, they totally reversed it! Apparently, their sales plummeted, so they backed down. Good for them, I guess. People in the comments were saying they were already looking at alternatives like TrueNAS, and some even had issues with Synology's own Drive software wiping files. Sounds like a mess they deserved.

Go Compiler Bug Found by Cloudflare

Then, Cloudflare found a pretty serious bug in Go's ARM64 compiler. This is super deep tech stuff, but it's always cool when big companies like Cloudflare dig into these things and find issues in core tools. A lot of folks in the comments were reminiscing about how compilers used to be way buggier back in the day, and one person mentioned that High-Frequency Trading (HFT) firms often find these obscure compiler bugs because they push things so hard.

Competitor Crippled a Bootcamp via Reddit

This one's wild: a competitor apparently crippled a $23.5 million coding bootcamp by becoming a Reddit moderator and basically trashing them. Super sneaky, right? It just shows how much power moderators can have and how easily online reputations can be attacked. Comments were full of people saying they've seen similar unethical tactics on Google, ProductHunt, and YouTube too. Sketchy!

One Guy Fights EU Chat Control Bill

Big win for privacy here! Some dude launched a "spam campaign" and it actually helped ravage the EU's "Chat Control" bill. This bill would've let them scan everyone's private messages, so it's a huge relief that it's getting pushback. Goes to show that one person can actually make a difference in democracy, which is pretty inspiring.

Discord Leaked Government IDs

Not great news for Discord users: they announced that government IDs for up to 70,000 users might have been leaked in a breach. Yikes! That's a huge privacy blunder. The comments had some good points about how companies should use zero-knowledge proofs for age verification instead of storing sensitive IDs, which makes a lot of sense.

MAME Cracks Hyper Neo Geo 64 After 20 Years

For the retro gaming fans, this is awesome! After two decades of work, MAME finally cracked the Hyper Neo Geo 64, getting full sound emulation working. This is a big deal for preserving old arcade games. People in the comments were getting nostalgic about 90s MIDI game music and how much effort went into getting good sound out of early PC hardware.

Doctorow on Tech Cartels Breaking Laws

And finally, Cory Doctorow had a piece out about how American tech cartels use their apps to break the law. He basically argues that these big companies leverage their platform control to skirt regulations. It's a pretty strong take, and it got people talking about how AI copying artists without permission is just the latest example of this kind of behavior.

Anyway, just wanted to give you the quick rundown. Talk later!

All Stories from Today

Synology reverses policy banning third-party HDDs (www.guru3d.com)

We found a bug in Go's ARM64 compiler (blog.cloudflare.com)

A competitor crippled a $23.5M bootcamp by becoming a Reddit moderator (larslofgren.com)

One-man campaign ravages EU 'Chat Control' bill (www.politico.eu)

Discord says 70k users may have had their government IDs leaked in breach (www.theverge.com)

The email they shouldn't have read (it-notes.dragas.net)

After 2 decades of tinkering, MAME cracks the Hyper Neo Geo 64 (www.readonlymemo.com)

Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2025 (www.nobelprize.org)

A few things to know before stealing my 914 (2022) (www.hagerty.com)

Doctorow: American tech cartels use apps to break the law (lithub.com)

Suspicionless ChatControl must be taboo in a state governed by the rule of law (digitalcourage.social)

Kurt Got Got (fly.io)

The RSS feed reader landscape (lighthouseapp.io)

Without data centers, GDP growth was 0.1% in the first half of 2025 (fortune.com)

WinBoat: Windows apps on Linux with seamless integration (www.winboat.app)

OpenAI, Nvidia fuel $1T AI market with web of circular deals (www.bloomberg.com)

Ortega hypothesis (en.wikipedia.org)

Svelte’s characteristics that likely contribute most to improved performance (chuniversiteit.nl)

Julia 1.12 highlights (julialang.org)

Show HN: Recall: Give Claude memory with Redis-backed persistent context (www.npmjs.com)

The weaponization of travel blacklists (papersplease.org)

Now open for building: Introducing Gemini CLI extensions (blog.google)

Bank of England flags risk of 'sudden correction' in tech stocks inflated by AI (www.ft.com)

Bob Ross paintings to be auctioned to fund US public broadcasting (www.bbc.com)

Study of 1M-year-old skull points to earlier origins of modern humans (www.theguardian.com)

Portland is not burning. Here's live context and sourced fact checks (isportlandburning.com)

Apple defined ICE as a "protected class" in blocking anti-ICE apps (boingboing.net)

Show HN: Oh Yah – Routine management app I built for my sons (ohyahapp.com)

PWA Browser Scorecards (pwascore.com)

The paradoxical efficient market hypothesis (2024) (3quarksdaily.com)