Apple has locked my Apple ID, and I have no recourse. A plea for help
The article discusses the potential security vulnerabilities of using an Apple ID, including the risks of account takeover and unauthorized access to personal data. It provides recommendations for enhancing the security of Apple ID accounts, such as enabling two-factor authentication and monitoring account activity.
Doxers posing as cops are tricking big tech firms into sharing people's data
Hackers are posing as law enforcement officials to trick major tech companies into sharing users' private data, a tactic known as 'doxing.' This report highlights the growing problem of cybercriminals exploiting security vulnerabilities to access and potentially misuse sensitive personal information.
Poor Johnny still won't encrypt
The article discusses the importance of using encryption to protect personal data and communication, and how many people still struggle to adopt secure practices despite the availability of easy-to-use encryption tools. It highlights the need for better education and awareness around cybersecurity best practices.
The Coming Need for Formal Specification
The article discusses the growing importance of formal specification in software development, as the complexity of systems increases and the need for rigorous verification and validation becomes more critical. It argues that formal specification will become a necessary skill for software engineers in the future.
We built another object storage
The article discusses the motivations behind building a new object storage solution, highlighting the limitations of existing options and the need for a more flexible and scalable solution to meet the evolving data storage requirements of modern applications.
Show HN: Claude Code recipes for knowledge workers
I've been using Claude Code daily for about 6 months. After building the same prompts over and over, I started documenting them as "recipes" - structured prompts with context about when to use them and what output to expect.
This repo has 100 recipes covering common knowledge work tasks:
- Meeting notes → action items
- Status reports
- Performance reviews
- Proposals and presentations
- Data analysis narratives
- SOPs and documentation
Each recipe includes: - The problem it solves
- When to use it (and when not to)
- Prerequisites
- Step-by-step prompts
- Example output
- Troubleshooting tips
The recipes are organized into 10 tiers from universal tasks (everyone needs meeting notes help) to specialized functions (M&A due diligence, legal research).I also included 10 sample slash commands in the /premium folder that you can install directly into Claude Code's ~/.claude/commands/ directory.
Happy to answer questions about how these evolved or discuss the patterns I've noticed in what makes prompts work well for different task types.
Bookmark for CAD/2d/3D Useful links
This article discusses the integration of CAD (Computer-Aided Design) 2D and 3D models with SAP CPQ (Configure, Price, Quote), enabling seamless integration of product configurators and CAD data within the SAP ecosystem.
AI is bringing old nuclear plants out of retirement
The article examines the potential role of artificial intelligence (AI) in the nuclear power industry, exploring how AI could help optimize operations, improve safety, and address challenges like radioactive waste management.
Battery storage hits $65/MWh, a tipping point for solar
The article discusses how battery storage capacity has reached a 65 MWh tipping point, enabling more widespread adoption of solar power. This milestone is seen as a significant step towards making renewable energy more accessible and affordable for both residential and commercial applications.
UK Lords propose ban on VPNs for children
The UK House of Lords has proposed banning the use of VPNs by children, citing concerns over online safety and potential misuse. The proposed legislation aims to restrict access to VPNs for minors in the UK, though the details and potential implications of such a ban are still being debated.
Life in Gaza under Israel's all-encompassing surveillance regime
The article explores Israel's extensive surveillance and monitoring of Palestinians in Gaza, including the use of facial recognition technology, military drones, and other advanced digital tools to track and target individuals. It highlights the complex privacy and human rights implications of this extensive surveillance program.
The military's new AI says boat strike 'unambiguously illegal'
The article discusses a hypothetical scenario involving a boat strike, which was analyzed by the U.S. military's new AI system. The AI system determined that the scenario would be considered unambiguously illegal under international law.
Cybercriminals are exploiting ChatGPT and Grok to spread AMOS malware to Macs
Cybercriminals have exploited ChatGPT to create a new malware called 'Grok Amos' that targets macOS systems. The malware uses AI-generated code to bypass security measures and gain access to sensitive user information.
Show HN: Browser4 – an open-source browser engine for agents and concurrency
Hi HN,
I’d like to share an open-source project we’ve been working on for a while: Browser4.
The motivation came from a recurring frustration: most browser automation tools (Playwright, Selenium, Puppeteer) are excellent for human-written scripts, but start to show friction when used as a core execution layer for AI agents or at very high concurrency.
So instead of building “another wrapper around Playwright”, we experimented with a different direction: designing a browser engine where AI agents are first-class citizens.
### What Browser4 is
Browser4 is a browser automation engine built on native Chrome DevTools Protocol (CDP), with a focus on:
* Coroutine-safe concurrency (designed to run many browser sessions in parallel)
* Agent-oriented APIs (navigation, interaction, extraction as composable actions)
* Hybrid extraction: ML agent driven extraction + LLM extraction + structured selectors + an SQL-like DOM query language (X-SQL)
* Low-level control without Playwright-style abstraction overhead
It’s written in Kotlin/JVM, mainly because we needed predictable concurrency behavior and long-running stability under load.
The project is fully open-source (Apache 2.0).
### What it’s not
* It’s not a drop-in Playwright replacement.
* It’s not a no-code RPA tool.
* It’s not “LLM magic” — LLMs sit outside the browser engine.
Browser4 intentionally stays close to the browser execution layer and leaves planning/reasoning to external agent loops.
### Current use cases we’re testing
* Large-scale web data extraction
* Agentic workflows (search → navigate → extract → summarize)
* Price / content monitoring with frequent revisits
* High-concurrency crawling where browser startup and context switching are bottlenecks
On a single machine, we can sustain very high daily page visits, though we’re still validating benchmarks across different workloads.
### Open questions (where I’d love feedback)
* For agentic systems, does it make sense to bypass Playwright entirely and work closer to CDP?
* Where do you see the biggest pain points when combining LLMs with browser automation today?
* Is JVM a reasonable choice here, or is Python still the better tradeoff despite concurrency limits
* What abstractions would you want in a browser engine built for AI agents?
### Links
* GitHub: https://github.com/platonai/browser4
* Website (light overview): https://browser4.io
Happy to answer technical questions or hear criticism — especially from people running browser automation or agent systems in production.
Thanks for reading.
The real lock-in in GitHub is not the code, but the stars
The article discusses the importance of GitHub stars and how they can be used as a metric for evaluating a software project's popularity and potential impact. It provides insights into analyzing and leveraging GitHub stars to better understand the software development landscape.
Google and Apple roll out emergency security updates after zero-day attacks
Google and Apple have released emergency security updates to address zero-day vulnerabilities being actively exploited in the wild. The updates aim to patch critical flaws that could allow attackers to gain unauthorized access to user devices and data.
Music Algorithms Failed Us
The article discusses how music recommendation algorithms have failed to provide users with truly personalized and diverse music discoveries, instead promoting popular and mainstream content. It highlights the need for algorithms that better understand individual music preferences and interests to improve music discovery.
Trump Pretends to Block State AI Laws; Media Pretends That's Legal
The article discusses a controversial executive order signed by former US President Trump that aimed to preempt state-level regulations on artificial intelligence, which legal experts argue may exceed the president's constitutional authority.
Windows 3.1 in the Browser
The article discusses the history and technical details of the Windows 3.10 operating system, including its system architecture, software components, and emulator-based demonstration of its functionality.
Marco Rubio: No more woke fonts
The article discusses Marco Rubio's proposal to ban the use of the Calibri font, which he claims has become associated with 'wokeness.' It examines the political and cultural implications of this proposed action, which has sparked debate about the intersection of technology, language, and ideology.