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New ask Hacker News story: Ask HN: How to escalate a rejected Google extension?

Ask HN: How to escalate a rejected Google extension? 2 by modzu | 0 comments on Hacker News. I submit an extension (an adblocker) to Google Chrome's web store. Google keeps rejecting it for dubious reasons. The first rejection was claim it was "spam". When I appealed, the review came back that it contained "additional functionality" because it uses "modifies network traffic". Well of course it does! When I asked the reviewer how I could achieve the stated functionality of blocking ads without the use of "declarativeNetRequest" I simply received the same canned response. I submit a totally new update that simplified the code and included comments, and references to other open source projecs that use the exact same mechanisms. Again it was rejected. On this appeal I asked if it could be escalated to a senior reviewer who could possibly reply with more context. Same canned response and rejection. I can't help but think Google has some int...

New ask Hacker News story: Ask HN: I made an image watermarking tool. What are the issues open-sourcing it?

Ask HN: I made an image watermarking tool. What are the issues open-sourcing it? 3 by minimaxir | 2 comments on Hacker News. A couple months ago, I found that a) visual image watermarking is trivially defeated by AI image editing so invisible image watermarks are likely the future and b) the only steganographic image watermarking tools are hard-to-use open-source tools or proprietary tools like SynthID. So as an experiment I tried using agents to create a novel image watermarking approach…and it unexpectedly worked: mostly imperceptible, tamper resistant, higher capacity, doesn't use a neural network, and real time encode/decode. I want to open-source it as there are very many legitimate uses for image watermarking. However, as of late there has been a lot of discourse about image watermarking on both sides, namely a) invisible image watermarks can be used to faciliate dystopian user tracking (https://ift.tt/6josnSb ) and b) tools to strip AI image watermarks are unethical/antis...

New ask Hacker News story: Ask HN: Job market for SDMs/Engineering Managers. Any reliable data?

Ask HN: Job market for SDMs/Engineering Managers. Any reliable data? 4 by ed_balls | 1 comments on Hacker News. I’m trying to find reliable data on the job market for Software Development Managers/Engineering Managers. It’s easy to find broad tech hiring reports, but hard to break the data down by role, company type, location, or tech stack. Anecdotally, it looks worse than the market for SDEs. Many companies are flattening management structures. Managers are taking on more teams and more direct reports. Coinbase is the extreme example. Does anyone know of good datasets, job-board analyses, or reports that track this? I wonder if I should go back to IC or maybe I should become Software Agent Manager ;)

New ask Hacker News story: Tell HN: Helium is the best browser I ever used

Tell HN: Helium is the best browser I ever used 4 by prmph | 3 comments on Hacker News. Helium (https://ift.tt/81U96kt) is Chromium-based, with all the Google odiousness removed, emphasizing minimalism, privacy, zero telemetry, built-in uBlock Origin, and no sync or AI features. I am just a regular user that was looking for a Firefox alternative for a long time. I do not know why Helium does not get more attention. It's so fast all the time even with several hundred tabs, it never crashed, it is strongly privacy and safety protecting, I do not have one complaint about it. Here are some ways the others fall short: - Firefox and all its derivatives are frequently incredibly sluggish, even on the same machine at the same time other browsers based on Chromium and Webkit are fast. I really wanted to like them, but I just gave up finally. I can't even use Mullvad browser now. - Safari's interface and UX seems somewhat clunky to me. I tried Orion; it shows a lot of promise as m...

New ask Hacker News story: New Biochemistry-Based Metabolic Protocol Seeking Alpha Concierge Members

New Biochemistry-Based Metabolic Protocol Seeking Alpha Concierge Members 2 by joshwprinceton | 0 comments on Hacker News. Hi HN - I've developed a cutting-edge weight loss / metabolic protocol based on some of the top scientific publications over the past year, with support of an industry veteran MD. If you are interested in trying it out - it is only one week per month and we offer a 100% money-back guarantee. josh@useraad.com + you can learn more at useraad.com - happy to answer any questions! Edit: I did it myself and lost 5-7 pounds during the week and have kept it off.

New ask Hacker News story: Ask HN: How to get my contact info off US political party's list

Ask HN: How to get my contact info off US political party's list 3 by kaycebasques | 1 comments on Hacker News. I donated to one of the main political parties in the USA a few years back. I must have left my email and phone number, or they found it. Big mistake. Now I get hundreds of emails and texts from random political candidates, none of whom I have ever said I explicitly support, or really have any context about whatsoever. So it seems like the political party has my email and number in some central list, and they distribute it to all of their candidates to use. Is that correct? Is there anything I can do to get my contact info off this terrible, terrible list?

New ask Hacker News story: Does anyone know since when we are close to building in space?

Does anyone know since when we are close to building in space? 3 by kingleopold | 1 comments on Hacker News. Spacex and all future datacenters plans, since when we have remotely close to any building and mainting tech for big project in space? does just sending satellites counts as datacenter level building and related? Cars still can't even fully drive themselves in the road that are designed specifically for them. but now they will be building datacenter in 3D space with insane complexity and power levels? With what tech? Makes no sense