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Wikipedia To Use AI

SlashDot - Wed, 04/30/2025 - 12:08pm
Categories: SlashDot

JPMorgan Chase security chief Patrick Opet laments the state of SaaS security in an open letter to the industry and calls on software providers to do more to enhance resilience

Computer Weekly Feed - Wed, 04/30/2025 - 12:08pm
JPMorgan Chase security chief Patrick Opet laments the state of SaaS security in an open letter to the industry and calls on software providers to do more to enhance resilience
Categories: Computer Weekly

The Tiger (2018)

Hacker News - Wed, 04/30/2025 - 12:03pm
Categories: Hacker News

Putting the "You" in CPU

Hacker News - Wed, 04/30/2025 - 12:00pm

Article URL: https://cpu.land/

Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43847065

Points: 1

# Comments: 0

Categories: Hacker News

Show HN: Slowcialize – A calmer social media platform for deeper connection

Hacker News - Wed, 04/30/2025 - 11:59am

Social media promised connection. What we got was noise, performance, and endless scrolling. We wanted something quieter — a space that actually helps you stay in touch with people who matter.

So we built Slowcialize: no feeds, no likes, no performance. Just simple, reflective updates shared at your pace.

It's being piloted at our university in India, and 250+ people are already using it. Would love your thoughts on how we can improve it — thanks!

Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43847047

Points: 1

# Comments: 0

Categories: Hacker News

Ask HN: Intentional Typos in YouTube Video Captions?

Hacker News - Wed, 04/30/2025 - 11:57am

Noticed this weird trend where YouTube video thumbnails have captions with weird typos. It is clear that this is intentional, because the actual video title has no typos, and the video creators I watch are very unlikely to leave this to chance.

Is this playing to some weird human psychology thing, where content with misspelling feel more relatable? It's kind of bizarre to me.

Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43847009

Points: 1

# Comments: 0

Categories: Hacker News

New Way to Fund Solo-Founders?

Hacker News - Wed, 04/30/2025 - 11:50am

I dare to say that ‘Pre-Seed funding’ is dying. And maybe the next unicorn isn’t the only target anymore.

Let me explain. In ‘Agency Eating the World’ - a brilliant article by Gian Segato - he shows how AI supercharges high-agency founders, and that Agency > Intelligence. I want to use this as a starting point to show how the shift in ‘startup founders’ is about to flip the VC industry.

If a founder doesn’t need a team for several months to test an idea, but instead can do it all themselves in a few weeks, then why bother crafting a pre-seed deck?

Then, if they succeed, there are two options: 1. Raise seed 2. Continue to go solo

I bet a lot of them will choose option two. Because - and I’ll be honest - fundraising sucks (as a process). Second, not all of these new startups need VC money. And those who do go for (and are eligible for) seed will skyrocket their valuations - seed will start to look more like a Series A.

So what do we have here? Thousands of hyper-profitable businesses are about to be born. Most of them don’t need your (VC) money. Guys like John Rush and Marc Lou are showing it’s possible right now. And yes, somewhere among them, there’s bound to be a Holy-Grail, One-Person Unicorn.

That’s the change. That’s the death of pre-seed as we know it. Now I want to ask some questions - and suggest some, though fewer, answers.

First: can early-stage VCs still be a part of it? My take is - yes, if you go even earlier in that ‘early’ part. Fund not startups, but people.

Yes, great founders push through struggles, come out stronger, and all that stuff that makes for a great biopic. But in reality - 99 other potentially great founders broke just a step before the win. We just don’t know their stories. It’s the cruel math of life. And in a lot of cases, their problems could have been solved with money they didn’t have. Not business problems - basic, life problems. A loved one’s illness. A draining day job. Another missed rent payment becomes the last straw.

What if we backed high-agency founders with a monthly check for a year so they could go all-in?

Instead of chasing unicorns, investors could build an "Angel Index" of extremely profitable, solo-run businesses.

That’s the idea behind my startup - SomeGuys.VC - a Kickstarter for High-Agency Solo-Founders. But I’m not here to pitch it. The thing is - we don’t have all the answers yet. For example, even we keep talking in terms of equity. But the startups I’m describing might never be for sale -> no ‘liquidity event’. They’re going to be cash machines, dividend-generating businesses.

Do we even have the right mechanisms for that? SAFE doesn’t seem to fit here. I’m thinking about revenue-share agreements between early investors and founders. But what should they look like? Should they be lifetime? What’s a fair share? How do you legally enforce it? Or simply a founder buyback clause - with a multiplier built in.

I really believe that these questions matter. VC, at its best, is a force for good. And now it could have an even bigger impact, helping way more people than before. It just wasn’t possible before AI - such funding wasn’t enough. But now it is.

And it’s not just tech. Imagine a recent film school grad dropping an AI-generated movie with new, unique heroes, launching a new franchise. Teachers are inventing new ways to educate. A PhD student is coming up with a revolutionary approach in their field after weeks of using the latest LLM. And things we can’t imagine yet.

This idea seems to be couchsurfing through the minds of bright people lately. I.e. Garry Tan and YC recently launched a program for students, offering 20k so they can dedicate their summer to building something they’re passionate about. We suggest taking it one step further.

AI is going to change everything. VC is no exception. We'd love to hear your thoughts on that.

Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43846932

Points: 2

# Comments: 1

Categories: Hacker News

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