What is Hackers' Pub?

Hackers' Pub is a place for software engineers to share their knowledge and experience with each other. It's also an ActivityPub-enabled social network, so you can follow your favorite hackers in the fediverse and get their latest posts in your feed.

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연계가 안 되면 거치대 위치만이라도 인접해서 만들어달라는 이야기도 했었는데 서울시가 어어어떻게 경기도에다가 시설물을 설치를 하냐 그러면 철거당한다 위례신도시도 우리가 싹 다 할랬는데 안됐다 어쩌고... 했던 기억도 있습니다. 코로나 전 이야기에요.

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“Young people still have human rights, and that includes the right to access information and to associate with other people and to speak to the world. These laws are designed to diminish those rights,” EFF’s David Greene told The Intercept. theintercept.com/2026/03/05/ko

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My job as a senior developer with a team of juniors is to figure out what to write, sketch a PoC as guidance, and then delegate the actual implementation to them. I'm going to look at that, explain misunderstandings or poor style choices, and guide them into implementing something that meets our standards.

I don't think LLMs can do my job yet. But I think we're getting shockingly close to them being able to do the other part. And I'm worried how we're going to get more senior developers.

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lol the nuances I find when developing for activitypub ...

I found out resolve the ids of the create activities , e.g. mastodon.ie/users/IanOB/status

but does not (e.g pixelfed.social/p/mahop/935715) and these are the actual ids that come in the object.

What is more interesting is that you can actually announce create activities, and mastodon fallback to actually "boosting" but not notifying the creator as boosted. Other people would see it properly.

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The View From RSS - What the web looks like when you subscribe to 2,000 RSS feeds.

Such a cool setup. I would ike to have something like this someday. Where I would only have one feed to look at, I won't need anything else.

Currently, I have like 10 feeds.

carolinecrampton.com/the-view-

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no YOU added a bunch of helper sensors into home assistant so that the nut server (heh heh) talking to the two big upses could be inserted into the HA energy dashboards, so now you can literally graph how much your dumb nerd shit is costing you in real money

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In the whole Proton situation, there are a lot of mixed equities and real problems surfacing, but not all of them are appropriately ascribed to Proton.

Let's put aside for the moment that the FBI sucks. They do! Under the US MLAT with Switzerland, is it Proton's role to deny the request from the US government?

Is it not; it is the Swiss government's role to do so if they wish. If they do so, they endanger a treaty that has been in place since 1977, while also signaling to other countries with similar agreements that their word is mud—or at best, contingent on them liking the current government of the ally country.

Maybe not an awesome tradeoff to stick it to the Feebs.

And Proton, like them or not, has been clear about their position on honoring Swiss law from the jump. And should they leave Switzerland for another EU country, it will be that state's laws they abide by.

You may contend that Proton should deny lawful (note: not necessarily ethical) requests from their government to protect their users. That's a position you can take, but I don't believe it has ever been Proton's. Their primary privacy offer is end-to-end encryption between email addresses that support it, and on-disk encryption of your data, along with a VPN. They make anonymous accounts possible, but do not guarantee any data you give them will be withheld from lawful requests from Swiss authorities, which is what happened here.

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"Grammarly’s “expert review” feature offers to give users writing advice “inspired by” subject matter experts, including recently deceased professors, as Wired reported on Wednesday. When I tried the feature out myself, I found some experts that came as a surprise for a different reason — one of them was my boss.

The AI-generated feedback included comments that appeared to be from The Verge’s editor-in-chief, Nilay Patel, as well as editor-at-large David Pierce and senior editors Sean Hollister and Tom Warren, none of whom gave Grammarly permission to include them in the “expert reviews.”

The feature, which launched in August, claims to help you “sharpen your message through the lens of industry-relevant perspectives.” When users select the “expert review” button in the Grammarly sidebar, it analyzes their writing and surfaces AI-generated suggestions “inspired by” related experts. Those “industry-relevant perspectives” include the likes of Stephen King, Neil deGrasse Tyson, and Carl Sagan, among many others.

The Verge found numerous other tech journalists named in the feature, as well, including former Verge editors Casey Newton and Joanna Stern, former Verge writer Monica Chin, Wired’s Lauren Goode, Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman and Jason Schreier, The New York Times’ Kashmir Hill, The Atlantic’s Kaitlyn Tiffany, PC Gamer’s Wes Fenlon, Gizmodo’s Raymond Wong, Digital Foundry founder Richard Leadbetter, Tom’s Guide editor-in-chief Mark Spoonauer, former Rock Paper Shotgun editor-in-chief Katharine Castle, and former IGN news director Kat Bailey. The descriptions for some experts contain inaccuracies, such as outdated job titles, which could have been accurately updated had Superhuman asked those people for permission to reference their work."

theverge.com/ai-artificial-int

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us-iran war

"The US has begun deploying special forces to the Middle East. At least 9 American MC-130J special operations aircraft arrived at the British Mildenhall airbase, most of which flew in at night without identification markings, and their flights were not displayed on online services.

At least two of them came from Hurlburt Field in the US, the main operational base of the US Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC). The 1st Special Operations Wing is based there. Hurlburt Field is also home to Combat Control (CCT) specialists... advanced airborne controllers.

This is exactly how the invasion of Iraq began in 2003. Even before the first missile strikes on Baghdad (March 20, 2003), groups of CIA Special Activities Division units and Army Special Forces (Green Berets) were already in Iraq. The special forces landed in Iraqi Kurdistan (right on the border with Iran). Their task was to establish contact with the Kurdish militia "Peshmerga", prepare airfields and create a second front to tie down the Iraqi army in the north. The SEALs, in particular, ensured the security of the Umm Qasr port - Iraq's only deep-water port, which was necessary for supplying and resupplying troops"

Cyberspec
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