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Instagram AI Influencers Are Defaming Celebrities with Sex Scandals

2026-01-13 @ 19:39:04Points: 46Comments: 25

The Housing Market Isn't for Single People

2026-01-13 @ 19:03:37Points: 39Comments: 58

A university got itself banned from the Linux kernel (2021)

2026-01-13 @ 18:58:55Points: 28Comments: 6

Signal leaders warn agentic AI is an insecure, unreliable surveillance risk

2026-01-13 @ 18:35:52Points: 243Comments: 73

AI Generated Music Barred from Bandcamp

2026-01-13 @ 18:31:50Points: 257Comments: 177

The Case for Blogging in the Ruins

2026-01-13 @ 18:00:20Points: 48Comments: 6

Show HN: Ayder – HTTP-native durable event log written in C (curl as client)

2026-01-13 @ 17:55:37Points: 28Comments: 7

I built Ayder — a single-binary, HTTP-native durable event log written in C. The wedge is simple: curl is the client (no JVM, no ZooKeeper, no thick client libs).

There’s a 2-minute demo that starts with an unclean SIGKILL, then restarts and verifies offsets + data are still there.

Numbers (3-node Raft, real network, sync-majority writes, 64B payload): ~50K msg/s sustained (wrk2 @ 50K req/s), client P99 ~3.46ms. Crash recovery after SIGKILL is ~40–50s with ~8M offsets.

Repo link has the video, benchmarks, and quick start. I’m looking for a few early design partners (any event ingestion/streaming workload).

How to make a damn website (2024)

2026-01-13 @ 17:23:46Points: 32Comments: 12

The Tulip Creative Computer

2026-01-13 @ 17:10:42Points: 110Comments: 29

Legion Health (YC S21) Hiring Cracked Founding Eng for AI-Native Ops

2026-01-13 @ 17:01:55Points: 1

Influencers and OnlyFans models are dominating U.S. O-1 visa requests

2026-01-13 @ 16:47:39Points: 238Comments: 169

What a year of solar and batteries saved us in 2025

2026-01-13 @ 15:49:27Points: 208Comments: 257

Show HN: Self-host Reddit – 2.38B posts, works offline, yours forever

2026-01-13 @ 15:35:09Points: 98Comments: 12

The key point: This doesn't touch Reddit's servers. Ever. Download the Pushshift dataset, run my tool locally, get a fully browsable archive. Works on an air-gapped machine. Works on a Raspberry Pi serving your LAN. Works on a USB drive you hand to someone.

What it does: Takes compressed data dumps from Reddit (.zst), Voat (SQL), and Ruqqus (.7z) and generates static HTML. No JavaScript, no external requests, no tracking. Open index.html and browse. Want search? Run the optional Docker stack with PostgreSQL – still entirely on your machine.

API & AI Integration: Full REST API with 30+ endpoints – posts, comments, users, subreddits, full-text search, aggregations. Also ships with an MCP server (29 tools) so you can query your archive directly from AI tools.

Self-hosting options: - USB drive / local folder (just open the HTML files) - Home server on your LAN - Tor hidden service (2 commands, no port forwarding needed) - VPS with HTTPS - GitHub Pages for small archives

Why this matters: Once you have the data, you own it. No API keys, no rate limits, no ToS changes can take it away.

Scale: Tens of millions of posts per instance. PostgreSQL backend keeps memory constant regardless of dataset size. For the full 2.38B post dataset, run multiple instances by topic.

How I built it: Python, PostgreSQL, Jinja2 templates, Docker. Used Claude Code throughout as an experiment in AI-assisted development. Learned that the workflow is "trust but verify" – it accelerates the boring parts but you still own the architecture.

Live demo: https://online-archives.github.io/redd-archiver-example/

GitHub: https://github.com/19-84/redd-archiver (Public Domain)

Pushshift torrent: https://academictorrents.com/details/1614740ac8c94505e4ecb9d...

Scott Adams has died

2026-01-13 @ 15:18:43Points: 434Comments: 803

Anthropic invests $1.5M in the Python Software Foundation

2026-01-13 @ 15:03:58Points: 310Comments: 144

Show HN: FastScheduler – Decorator-first Python task scheduler, async support

2026-01-13 @ 14:45:44Points: 24Comments: 6

So it's decorators for scheduling (@scheduler.every(5).minutes, @scheduler.daily.at("09:00")), state saves to JSON so jobs survive restarts, and there's an optional FastAPI dashboard if you want to see what's running.

No Redis, no message broker, runs in-process with your app. Trade-off is it's single process only — if you need distributed workers, stick with Celery.

Apple Creator Studio

2026-01-13 @ 14:14:18Points: 407Comments: 342

Local Journalism Is How Democracy Shows Up Close to Home

2026-01-13 @ 13:46:34Points: 338Comments: 227

Confer – End to end encrypted AI chat

2026-01-13 @ 13:45:45Points: 49Comments: 38

Signal creator Moxie Marlinspike wants to do for AI what he did for messaging - https://arstechnica.com/security/2026/01/signal-creator-moxi...

Private Inference: https://confer.to/blog/2026/01/private-inference/

Show HN: SnackBase – Open-source, GxP-compliant back end for Python teams

2026-01-13 @ 12:27:53Points: 49Comments: 6

I built this because I work in Healthcare and Life Sciences domain and was tired of spending months building the same "compliant" infrastructure (Audit Logs, Row-Level Security, PII Masking, Auth) before writing any actual product code.

The Problem: Existing BaaS tools (Supabase, Appwrite) are amazing, but they are hard to validate for GxP (FDA regulations) and often force you into a JS/Go ecosystem. I wanted something native to the Python tools I already use.

The Solution: SnackBase is a self-hosted Python (FastAPI + SQLAlchemy) backend that includes:

Compliance Core: Immutable audit logs with blockchain-style hashing (prev_hash) for integrity.

Native Python Hooks: You can write business logic in pure Python (no webhooks or JS runtimes required).

Clean Architecture: Strict separation of layers. No business logic in the API routes.

The Stack:

Python 3.12 + FastAPI

SQLAlchemy 2.0 (Async)

React 19 (Admin UI)

Links:

Live Demo: https://demo.snackbase.dev

Repo: https://github.com/lalitgehani/snackbase

The demo resets every hour. I’d love feedback on the DSL implementation or the audit logging approach.

Mozilla's open source AI strategy

2026-01-13 @ 12:00:12Points: 163Comments: 136

Show HN: An iOS budget app I've been maintaining since 2011

2026-01-13 @ 10:44:39Points: 118Comments: 55

At the time, my plan was to replace a few larger shareware projects with several smaller apps to spread the risk. That didn’t quite work out — one app, MoneyControl, quickly grew so much that it became my main focus.

Fifteen years later, the app is still on the App Store, still actively developed, and still used by people who started with version 1.0. Many apps from that era are long gone.

Looking back, these are some of the things that mattered most:

Starting early helped, but wasn’t enough on its own. Early visibility made a difference, but long-term maintenance and reliability are what kept users.

Focus beat diversification. I wanted many small apps. I ended up with one large, long-lived product. Deep focus turned out to be more sustainable.

Long-term maintenance is most of the work. Adapting to new iOS versions, migrating data safely, handling edge cases, and keeping old data usable mattered more than flashy features.

Discoverability keeps getting harder. Reaching users on the App Store today is much more difficult than it was years ago. Prices are higher than in the old 99-cent days, but visibility hasn’t improved.

I’m a developer first, not a marketer. I work alone, with occasional help from freelancers. No employees, no growth team. The app could probably have grown more with better marketing, but that was never my strength.

You don’t need to get rich to build something sustainable. I didn’t build this for an exit. I’ve been able to make a living from my work for over 20 years, which feels like success to me.

Building things you actually use keeps you honest. Every product I built was something I personally needed. That authenticity mattered more than any roadmap.

This week I released version 10 with a new design and a major technical overhaul. It feels less like a milestone and more like preparing the app for the next phase.

Happy to answer questions about long-term app maintenance, indie development, or keeping a product alive across many iOS generations.

Text-based web browsers

2026-01-13 @ 05:16:10Points: 263Comments: 97

We rolled our own documentation site

2026-01-13 @ 02:49:59Points: 15Comments: 9

Cowork: Claude Code for the rest of your work

2026-01-12 @ 19:27:19Points: 1218Comments: 519

The Cray-1 Computer System (1977) [pdf]

2026-01-09 @ 19:05:04Points: 143Comments: 89

Inlining – The Ultimate Optimisation

2026-01-09 @ 16:05:26Points: 12Comments: 4

Show HN: Ever wanted to look at yourself in Braille?

2026-01-09 @ 07:43:20Points: 15Comments: 2

Everything you never wanted to know about file locking (2010)

2026-01-08 @ 15:36:25Points: 38Comments: 9

Git Rebase for the Terrified

2026-01-07 @ 19:03:24Points: 195Comments: 210

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