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HN Buddy Daily Digest

Saturday, June 27, 2026

Hey buddy,

Man, you wouldn't believe the stuff popping up on Hacker News yesterday. Had to give you a quick rundown. Grab a coffee, this is kinda wild.

Anonymous 0-days on GitHub

First up, some anonymous account just started mass-dropping undisclosed 0-day exploits on GitHub. Yeah, like, brand new security holes that nobody knew about. It's totally nuts. The comments were all over the place, talking about the legality of it all. One dude even said, "Your SSN had been already stolen in the Equifax breach... it will be stolen in the inevitable next one," basically implying this is just another day in the office for data security. Kinda dark, but maybe true?

DSpark speeds up AI

Then there was this paper, DSpark, about speeding up how those big LLM AI models work. Super technical stuff, but the surprising thing was the comments. Instead of talking about the tech, a bunch of people just started arguing about US and China's relationship and geopolitical power. Seriously, like, way off topic. Goes to show how much people are thinking about that stuff, even on a tech forum.

Zuckerberg vs. Whistleblowers

You know Cory Doctorow? He wrote this piece about "Zuckerberg's war on whistleblowers." Apparently, Meta is going hard to silence anyone trying to leak stuff. One comment really hit me, saying how easy it is for people to go "mad when they receive that kind of power." Another one brought up a good point: if someone joins an org *planning* to be a whistleblower, is that really whistleblowing or more like espionage? Food for thought.

OpenRA is still kickin'

Remember playing Command & Conquer or Red Alert back in the day? Well, OpenRA, the open-source version, is still super active! People were getting all nostalgic in the comments. And get this, one person suggested that with LLMs, game AI could get so much better that opponents would feel genuinely "real" instead of just dumb machines. That's a pretty cool idea, right?

Fintech Engineering Handbook

There was a whole handbook about Fintech Engineering. What was super interesting in the comments was the classic developer debate: should you use floating-point numbers or integers when dealing with money? It sounds simple, but it gets complicated fast with rounding and precision. Most agreed on integers for exact accounting, but floats are fine for modeling. It's a real rabbit hole!

The case for physical media

Someone made a strong argument for owning physical media like DVDs, games, and books. You know, because streaming services can just yank stuff away. People in the comments were talking about how some Steam games don't actually have super strong DRM, so you can often keep playing them even if Steam goes away. And one person was loving it because "all the sheep are thinking 'why do I need this junk wasting space in my attic...'" so they get to collect stuff for almost nothing!

Asian AI startups are heating up

Finally, there's news about Asian AI startups launching models similar to the big Western ones, especially with Anthropic's export ban. One commenter was raving about a model called Fugu, saying its output was "fabulous" and it acted like a "senior engineer," even coding up hypotheses and finding problems. He said it gave him "a bit of an existential crisis" because it could do most of his job! But others were worried about all their code leaking to these new models. Wild times for AI, man.

Anyway, that's the gist! Talk later!

All Stories from Today

Anonymous GitHub account mass-dropping undisclosed 0-days (github.com)

DSpark: Speculative decoding accelerates LLM inference [pdf] (github.com)

Zuckerberg's war on whistleblowers (pluralistic.net)

OpenRA (www.openra.net)

Fintech Engineering Handbook (w.pitula.me)

The case for physical media ownership (dervis.de)

IP Crawl: Living atlas of open webcams discovered on the public internet (ipcrawl.com)

Streaming services' obnoxiously loud ads become illegal on July 1 in California (arstechnica.com)

Suspicious Discontinuities (2020) (danluu.com)

OpenTTD 16.0-Beta1 (www.openttd.org)

Asian AI startups launch Mythos-like models (techcrunch.com)

Turn your site into a place people can bump into each other (cauenapier.com)

'Careless People' author claims Meta surveilled her for 12mos to enforce silence (fortune.com)

WordStar: A Writer's Word Processor (1996) (www.sfwriter.com)

Michigan spent $1.8B and only created 602 jobs (www.msn.com)

What Ozempic does to the gut-brain axis (www.psychologytoday.com)

Post-Mythos Cybersecurity: Keep calm and carry on (cephalosec.com)

Anatomy of a Failed (Nation-State?) Attack (grack.com)

Choosing a Public DNS Resolver (evilbit.de)

How Many Elementary Particles Are There, Really? (www.quantamagazine.org)

Beer CSS – Build material design in record time (www.beercss.com)

Show HN: Adrafinil – keep a lid-closed Mac awake only while agents work (github.com)

Show HN: Hacker News on a train station-style flip board (popflame.quickish.space)

A Farmer Arrested for Going 5 Seconds over His Time Limit at Data Center Meeting (www.gadgetreview.com)

Screen time can damage under-twos' development, landmark study suggests (www.theguardian.com)

Doctors suspected man had brain cancer. He had worms (arstechnica.com)

Software Is Becoming Marketing (www.terezatizkova.com)

Enhancing X11 Application Security with LXC (2025) (dobrowolski.dev)

Everyone feared AI taking over; the real danger is AI serving just the few (news.ycombinator.com)

Ships keep moving through Hormuz despite strike (www.lloydslist.com)