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Are the sibling comments astroturfed? This seems like such a bizarre thing to be talking about in relation to an Anthropic model release. As someone from the UK, I don't feel like I'm living in an authoritarian country. And yet most of the sibling comments are insinuating that I am. Weird.

I'm sure there are people in Russia, China, ... who don't feel like they're living in an authoritarian country.

If you think Britain and Russia or China are equivalent in terms of government overreach, you need to find new sources of information.

> If you think Britain and Russia or China are equivalent in terms of government overreach, you need to find new sources of information.

Uh... you are making his point. People from way more authoritarian countries don't necessarily feel like they are living in an authoritarian country. Therefore whether or not it "feels" like you are living in one isn't a reliable measure.


Trivially true I suppose, but it doesn’t make my point irrelevant - do you think Britain is equivalent to China and Russia? If everyone does but us then yes my goodness they’ve done a good job controlling us, but that seems far fetched.

It's true (from a perception perspective):

China soars in democratic perception ranking as US, Israel plummet: Poll

https://thecradle.co/articles/china-soars-in-democratic-perc...


Maybe the rankings arent accurate.

It's a poll.

The UK has very recently[1] announced a new push for client side scanning by messaging providers which is both very likely to be unpopular and known here, so once one person cracks the joke, others are going to want to comment. Don’t think that requires astroturfing.

[1]: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/jun/08/starmer-t...


It's just people who use "For You" algorithm on X.

HN is extremely pro free speech and the UK has recently decided to engage in censorship. Part of the issue users here reckon with is the recency. Unlike many authoritarian countries that seem hopeless with regards to free speech the UKs censorship is a recent development that many think can still be undone through political action. Similar to takes on why Israel is being protested when places like sudan arent.

Indeed: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/ce83pj1ggmeo

In the uk you can very much be imprisoned for "hate speech", which in my view is a form of censorship.


This has passed me by - can you give me some specific examples?

I personally don't feel limited in my speech, but I'm willing to accept that I may be wrong

Nobody I know in real life is talking about censorship or free speech in the UK


"Nobody I know is talking about censorship" is a certified HN banger.

I don't know, I would expect it to come up in the pub or something if people were concerned about it, it's not like we have the thought police here

Hey man, fellow Brit here. The American view on certain aspects of British life is insane. I've lived in not one but two places that have been called Muslim no-go zones in American media. My main memory of living near the east London mosque is an elderly Muslim trying to offer my his seat on the bus (I was on crutches) while two drunk gammons looked on gormlessly.

On the other hand, it is quite alarming that I can no longer say I support all non violent protests against the genocide in Palestine because that would include the group Palestine Action. It's amazing that supporting them openly is essentially equivalent to supporting Al Qaeda.


Sounds like the people around you don't care about the things that is actually eroding free speech.

Read about Dr Aladwan - an NHS doctor - who has barred from practising because of her comments on Israel. Read the common articles about her (BBC etc), and then go actually read her tweets. Common BS of conflating criticism of a government (Israel) with antisemitism.

Also, this article may be of interest:

China soars in democratic perception ranking as US, Israel plummet: Poll

https://thecradle.co/articles/china-soars-in-democratic-perc...


> Nobody I know in real life is talking about censorship or free speech in the UK

Yeah because free speech has never really been a core value in the UK


My dear friend, please start with the online safety act, and continue with the recent developments regarding age verification and/or device scanning on all operating systems to check for nudity. No, nobody is talking about it here, but we should be.

The UK has a censorship bureau, ofcom. The example that comes up most here is 4chan, which the UK is currently trying to ban because they refuse to do age verification. If you read the threads here you will see other stories. One that sticks out to me is someone who was talking about their struggles running a forum about depression. They live in canada and were contacted by ofcom demanding the forum add age verification, cant totally remember the reason but it was something about kids being able to access talk about depression. Ofcom said that if he doesnt add age verification to his forum he will be arrested if he ever enters the UK. He even blocked uk IPs but they said that wasnt enough. We can quibble about whether age verification is a form of censorship, I think it clearly is, if only because it is a large regulatory hurdle that stops people from hosting forums because its too much regulatory work.

The UK also has a very broad definition of hate speech that many users here detest.


Makes sense, thank you. I am opposed to the age verification laws that we have introduced recently.

They’re talking about British hate speech laws. They think other countries have universal free speech and they absolutely do not, but for some reason they think Britain goes too far. Although “think” is probably too generous - they’re parroting talking points.

The downvoters are welcome to offer actual counterarguments.

>HN is extremely pro free speech

It is most definitively not, at least in the 10ish year's I've lurked.

It is "pro free speech" in the sense Elon Musk is a "free speech absolutist": in pretty much the diametrically opposed meaning of the phrase.


> HN is extremely pro free speech

They like to think so. But if someone makes a comment that goes against the groupthink here, they will get downvoted, flagged, and shadow-banned.


Neither do people living in China

> I run the team at OpenAI that's responsible for the ChatGPT App Store, Codex plugins, and all things MCP.

> The reason MCP isn't dead is because practically ~every company on the planet is building an MCP server.

You have drunk the kool aid. No shot ~every company is building an MCP server.


It was obvious hyperbole. I can believe that there are many companies where the boss heard about MCP and put it on a roadmap before anthropic decided that it wasn’t a good idea… and now the team is implementing this in the name of “we need to do some AI”

There's really no evidence that OpenAI has shared everything they have.

It's not cut and dry to differentiate between the act and the wager.

One issue is that prediction markets provide financial incentives to perform actions in the real world. For example, if I want a head of state murdered, I can wager lots of money that they won't be murdered. If somebody wants to earn that money, they can simply bet against me and then murder them.

It's not an dispassionate wager like betting on roulette, it's a wager that directly influences the real world, at least a bit.

Of course you could directly hire an assassin, but that doesn't come with plausible deniability.


It's a roulette that you can actually manipulate. that 's why it's worse.


I wonder if the training data for some languages has higher quality code. I can imagine some niche languages having a higher standard than, for example Python, which surely has a bunch of random buggy scripts in the mix.

On the other hand, even if that were true, I don’t know how important it would actually be since LLMs can generalise across languages well.

It might be best to pick languages where it’s just harder to screw up, the canonical example being to prefer typescript over JavaScript.


This is a real Monet.


I know, but it could be AI-generated as well, because people can't tell them apart. The point was that even if AI could imitate Monet perfectly, it's not Monet. It's a worthless test.


AI agents have made me far more productive, but the work now feels like drudgery. The most intellectually stimulating parts of the job were automated away first, and I am getting increasingly sick of typing into a chat bot all day.

I got into software engineering because I was always fascinated by getting computers to do stuff, and I really enjoyed the manual task of programming. It's been a dream to earn a living doing something I would do in my spare time. I was pretty good at it too.

I'm not having fun any more, so I've decided to leave the field and become a teacher. I won't earn nearly as much money but I expect to feel more fulfilled, and I hope I can help make a difference to some young people.

I've had an extraordinarily privileged career, and many people never get the luxury of enjoying their work at all. But I'd rather try to enjoy what I do day to day than persist in something that's lost its spark.


I am still coding interesting and complex stuff manually. I just make the AI do the boring stuff like data processing scripts or setting up tests. So it works kind of well for me


That's what I'd like to do in my spare time. My job has become intolerant of that slow pace though now they've drunk the kool aid. I work at a startup and we're expected to produce game changing new features every day.


I'm curious, how do you think people around you there are taking it? I just can't help but feel like that is unsustainable and everyone is just going to burn out


I've had the same experience. I used to enjoy doing software dev, I was good at my job and liked it and did good work. Then the AI push happened and now whenever I'm typing code I think "I wonder if AI could do this for me" except using AI is infantilizing and boring and I don't want to do it. So I feel bad if I use it and I feel bad if I don't use it. So mostly I go post on HN or something instead of working and my productivity has tanked in the last year. Luckily I'm nearer the end of my career than the beginning so it won't be a big financial impact to me when I finally leave the industry, hopefully later this year.


Weekends are the untapped frontier. Still room to scale.


yup! When i did an analysis last month, GitHub is up 89.3% on weekdays and 96.5% on weekends. Incidents touch 62% of weekdays and 11% of weekends. Claude shows the same pattern: 92.5% weekday, 97.8% weekend. Tuesday through Thursday is the danger zone. Sunday is practically a different service.

https://www.aakash.io/tech-chase/github-and-claude-are-down-...


I had an occasion recently where I was working a lot of late nights/early mornings with AI use. And I'd be getting these instant, beautiful responses, and then, as soon as the sun started coming in the windows, it would take longer and fail more, and by the time the clock struck 9 AM, every LLM had turned back into a pumpkin.


Which service(s) were you using, if you don't mind sharing?

I'm curious if most of the big players including eg Google do this thing of nerfing models or it's limited to more "smart" (read: black box models like ChatGPT.


Are you saying US data centers idle in the night rather than serving European/Asian users?


ideally european/asian users would hit european/asian servers, so potentially not surprising


Inference results for Copilot are also a lot better during weekends than workdays. Its my personal experience so take it with a grain of salt, but I work on personal projects only on weekends mostly due to that brain drain mon-fri of copilot.


change is the biggest cause then?


Or usage


I imagine that it could be usage, but it also could be fewer people caring to report issues on the weekends too for that matter.


Wait until they go 996!


How far through did you get? I think it gets significantly better in season 2, and continues improving thereafter. Basically after they starting bringing in bigger overarching storylines.

I made a few false starts where I couldn’t really get through season 1, but after I persisted it was worth it.


Somehow it fizzled out for me somewhere in season 3. These days I can see myself powering through with some skipping, but I would probably rather rewatch The Wire.


S2 gives off a lot of founder/startup energy. I could see it appealing to Hacker News community


The official Sony AI video, which is really interesting and has some glorious footage: https://youtu.be/FrGq8ltb-_E?si=PWm1Dv0T9UHUFw0t


More details and videos at https://ace.ai.sony/


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