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HN Buddy Daily Digest

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Hey buddy,

Man, Wednesday on Hacker News was pretty wild. Lemme quickly hit you with the highlights while I got a sec:

Denmark Ditching Microsoft

First up, big news: the Danish government is apparently ditching Microsoft software starting next year. They're trying to get more "digital independence," which sounds smart, right?

But the comments were super interesting. Some folks were like, "Nah, this is just a token gesture, Europe is still way too hooked on foreign tech." Others got pretty heated, saying, "Hold on, Europe isn't the declining empire, the US is!" It turned into a whole geopolitical thing, pretty wild for a software story.

Never Buy a .online Domain

Then there was this post titled "Never buy a .online domain," and boy, did people have stories. The original guy had a nightmare with emails and verification because of issues with the TLD itself.

The comments were hilarious and kinda scary. People shared their own TLD horror stories, including the infamous "Scunthorpe problem" where filters block legitimate words. Someone even talked about Netflix *not* verifying emails properly, leading to endless password reset attempts for an account they didn't even own!

Amazon Accused of Price Fixing

Big tech getting hammered again: Amazon's being accused of a massive scheme to inflate prices across the board.

The comments were split. Some people are already fed up, saying they barely buy from Amazon anymore because it’s so hard to find real products among all the duplicates and fakes. Others defended Amazon's convenience and generous return policy. It's like everyone has a love-hate relationship with them.

Em-Dashes and AI on HN

This one was pretty meta: a study found that new accounts on Hacker News are way more likely to use em-dashes, and the implication is it might be because of LLM output. Like, AI-generated comments use more fancy punctuation.

The comments section itself became a live experiment, with people arguing about whether *their* comments sounded like AI or not. Someone even apologized for misrepresenting another user's LLM usage, it was pretty funny watching them try to detect "AI slop" in real-time.

Anthropic's Shifting AI Safety

This was a big one: Anthropic, the AI company behind Claude, dropped its flagship safety pledge. This comes right after another story about US military leaders meeting with Anthropic to argue against Claude's safeguards.

Basically, the Pentagon wants less "safety" so they can use AI for military stuff, and Anthropic seems to be caving. Comments were all over the place, from "LLMs are just autocomplete, put safeguards around them yourself" to concerns about companies pretending to be all about philanthropy while quietly dropping ethical guidelines.

AIs Keep Recommending Nuclear Strikes

Speaking of AI and military, this one was chilling: AIs in war game simulations apparently can't stop recommending nuclear strikes. Yikes.

People in the comments were discussing why this happens – like, AIs don't understand concepts like "national will" or the long-term consequences of nuclear winter. Others brought up how many real-life close calls we've already had, making the future look pretty dicey.

Solar Power Surpasses Hydro in the US

And for some good news, solar power officially passed hydro on the US grid, following a huge 35% growth!

Everyone seemed pretty stoked about this. Discussions focused on how much more capacity we need and the rapid expansion of battery storage in places like California. It's a positive sign for renewable energy.

Alright, gotta run! Catch ya later!

All Stories from Today

Danish government agency to ditch Microsoft software (2025) (therecord.media)

Never buy a .online domain (www.0xsid.com)

Amazon accused of widespread scheme to inflate prices across the economy (www.thebignewsletter.com)

New accounts on HN more likely to use em-dashes (www.marginalia.nu)

Anthropic Drops Flagship Safety Pledge (time.com)

Claude Code Remote Control (code.claude.com)

US orders diplomats to fight data sovereignty initiatives (www.reuters.com)

Following 35% growth, solar has passed hydro on US grid (arstechnica.com)

Jimi Hendrix was a systems engineer (spectrum.ieee.org)

Google API keys weren't secrets, but then Gemini changed the rules (trufflesecurity.com)

Bus stop balancing is fast, cheap, and effective (worksinprogress.co)

Windows 11 Notepad to support Markdown (blogs.windows.com)

The Om Programming Language (www.om-language.com)

LLM=True (blog.codemine.be)

AIs can't stop recommending nuclear strikes in war game simulations (www.newscientist.com)

Show HN: I ported Tree-sitter to Go (github.com)

Show HN: A real-time strategy game that AI agents can play (llmskirmish.com)

Making MCP cheaper via CLI (kanyilmaz.me)

US Military leaders meet with Anthropic to argue against Claude safeguards (www.theguardian.com)

First Website (1992) (info.cern.ch)

How will OpenAI compete? (www.ben-evans.com)

100M-Row Challenge with PHP (github.com)

The Pentagon threatens Anthropic (www.astralcodexten.com)

Banned in California (www.bannedincalifornia.org)

GNU Texmacs (www.texmacs.org)

Show HN: Respectify – A comment moderator that teaches people to argue better (respectify.org)

The Misuses of the University (www.publicbooks.org)

Racket v9.1 (blog.racket-lang.org)

Turing Completeness of GNU find (arxiv.org)

Red Hat takes on Docker Desktop with its enterprise Podman Desktop build (thenewstack.io)