Published on February 15, 2026 at 06:00 CET (UTC+1)
I love the work of the ArchWiki maintainers (107 points by panic)
The author expresses gratitude for the maintainers of the ArchWiki, a free software documentation resource, on "I love Free Software Day." They highlight that documentation maintainers often receive little recognition despite creating an invaluable, widely consulted resource that helps users understand and configure software, even beyond the Arch Linux ecosystem.
My smart sleep mask broadcasts users' brainwaves to an open MQTT broker (366 points by minimalthinker)
A security researcher details reverse-engineering a smart sleep mask with EEG and stimulation capabilities. They found the device broadcasts users' brainwave data via an unsecured, open MQTT broker, allowing anyone to potentially read this sensitive data or even send electrical impulses to the sleeper, highlighting severe IoT security and privacy flaws.
Ooh.directory: a place to find good blogs that interest you (466 points by hisamafahri)
Ooh.directory is a curated directory of over 2,300 blogs across numerous topics, created as an alternative to algorithmic content discovery. It celebrates the diversity and personal nature of independent blogging, marking its 20th anniversary by helping users find quality, human-selected blogs based on genuine interest rather than engagement metrics.
Zvec: A lightweight, fast, in-process vector database (93 points by dvrp)
Zvec is an open-source, lightweight vector database developed by Alibaba. It is designed to be embedded directly into applications as an in-process library, prioritizing speed and minimal resource overhead for AI/ML workloads that require efficient similarity search on vector embeddings.
Instagram's URL Blackhole (115 points by tkp-415)
The article critiques Instagram's practice of obfuscating and redirecting external URLs shared in direct messages through its own in-app browser. This "blackhole" allows the platform to track user activity off-site, raising significant concerns over user privacy, data collection, and the control platforms exert over web navigation.
5,300-year-old 'bow drill' rewrites story of ancient Egyptian tools (87 points by geox)
Archaeologists have re-identified a 5,300-year-old Egyptian copper-alloy object as the earliest known rotary metal drill, a "bow drill." This finding, based on wear analysis and preserved leather thong remnants, significantly pushes back the timeline for advanced toolmaking and mechanical engineering in ancient Egypt, rewriting technological history.
uBlock filter list to hide all YouTube Shorts (719 points by i5heu)
This is a maintained filter list for the uBlock Origin ad-blocker designed to completely hide all YouTube Shorts content from the YouTube interface. It responds to user desire to avoid the short-form, algorithmic video feed, allowing for a more curated and focused viewing experience on the platform.
News publishers limit Internet Archive access due to AI scraping concerns (443 points by ninjagoo)
Major news publishers like The Guardian and The New York Times are restricting the Internet Archive's crawlers from accessing their sites. They are concerned that the Archive's publicly accessible Wayback Machine snapshots provide an easy backdoor for AI companies to scrape copyrighted news content for model training without permission or payment.
NewPipe: YouTube client without vertical videos and algorithmic feed (159 points by nvader)
NewPipe is an open-source Android client for YouTube that emphasizes privacy and user control. It avoids Google's official APIs, blocks ads, removes the algorithmic recommendation feed and Shorts, and offers features like background playback and pop-out video, presenting a stripped-down, intentional alternative to the official app.
Flood Fill vs. The Magic Circle (50 points by tobr)
The essay uses the computing metaphor of "flood fill" (automatic, spreading change) versus the "magic circle" (a bounded space for constrained action, like a game) to analyze AI automation. It argues that while AI will transform many digital domains, certain physical, social, or deeply human forms of work and interaction will remain protected within a "magic circle" that automation cannot easily penetrate.
Trend: Growing Conflict Between AI Data Scraping and Content Provenance.
Trend: User Backlash Against Algorithmic Feeds Drives "Intentional" Tech.
Trend: Proliferation of Lightweight, Embeddable AI Infrastructure.
Trend: IoT Security Failures Create Real-World AI Training & Exploit Risks.
Trend: The "Magic Circle" Defines the Limits of AI Automation.
Trend: Historical Human Ingenuity as a Blueprint for AI Problem-Solving.
Trend: The Unsung Role of Curation and Documentation in the AI Era.
Analysis generated by deepseek-reasoner