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March 14, 2026  ·  View on web


These are the most widely shared links from across Mastodon and the Fediverse today — surfaced by Murmel from thousands of posts in the open social web. This is the Fediverse-wide view. Sign up to get a digest tailored to the people you actually follow.

What do coders do after AI? - Anil Dash

anildash.com  ·  15 people Worth reading

A blog about making culture. Since 1999.

There are (sort of) two kinds of coders: those who see it as just a well-paying, stable job, and those who do it on nights and weekends because they love it, and it’s part of their identity. Today’s LLM tools now enable an individual to essentially be an entire software _factory_, and this is going to impact those 2 kinds of coders very differently — especially in how they respond to *both* of their bosses trying to put them out of work.

@anildash · Mar 13

+12
@anildash and 14 others

Do we want to keep fixing the same issue? Unlearned lessons from the first big oil crisis

theguardian.com  ·  15 people Worth reading

As energy prices tripled in the 1970s due to Middle Eastern wars, Scandinavia, France and the Netherlands sped up green transition

There is a simple answer. Fossil Fuel companies are determined to maintain their profits and having worked hard to deny any impact on climate are finding this a little more difficult to avoid - although many governments are trying their best to ignore it.

#Climate #Iran #War #ClimateChange #Economy

@Wen · Mar 13

+12
@Wen and 14 others

Palantir CEO Makes Shocking Confession on Disrupting Democratic Power

newrepublic.com  ·  266 people

They’re saying the quiet part out loud now.

“Palantir CEO Alex Karp thinks his AI technology will lessen the power of ‘highly educated, often female voters, who vote mostly Democrat’ while increasing the power of working-class men.”

@acdha · Mar 12

+263
@acdha and 265 others

UK energy prices are soaring – and propagandists want to sell you a false reason why | George Monbiot

theguardian.com  ·  21 people

The war on Iran has put fossil-fuel prices centre stage, but don’t believe those who tout ‘maximising the North Sea’ as our salvation, says Guardian columnist George Monbiot

Monbiot nails it again.

> If it is sometimes hard to tell the difference between fossil-fuel lobbyists and the billionaire press, this is because there isn’t one. For the sake of the ultra-rich, we are all being gaslit.

@jbond · Mar 13

+18
@jbond and 20 others

Digg

digg.com  ·  15 people

Thanks for being part of our beta. Stay tuned for what comes next.

D'oh, the new digg didn't last too long. :sadness:

"Building on the internet in 2026 is different. We learned that the hard way. Today we're sharing difficult news: we've made the decision to significantly downsize the Digg team."

@lmorchard · Mar 13

+12
@lmorchard and 14 others

The Wyden Siren Goes Off Again: We’ll Be “Stunned” By What the NSA Is Doing Under Section 702

techdirt.com  ·  35 people

Senator Ron Wyden says that when a secret interpretation of Section 702 is eventually declassified, the American public “will be stunned” to learn what the NSA has been doing. If you&#8…

The #Wyden Siren Goes Off Again: We’ll Be “Stunned” By What the #NSA Is Doing Under Section 702 - "If you’ve followed Wyden’s career, you know this is not a man prone to hyperbole — and you know his track record on these warnings is perfect."

@glynmoody · Mar 13

+32
@glynmoody and 34 others

“This Is Not The Computer For You” · Sam Henri Gold

samhenri.gold  ·  174 people

Sam Henri Gold is a product design engineer building playful, useful software.

i really liked this blog post about the macbook neo

@jacqueline · Mar 12

+171
@jacqueline and 173 others

Everything's Casino

joanwestenberg.com  ·  15 people Worth reading

On the evening of February 28, 2026, American B-2 bombers lifted off from Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri. By the time they reached Iranian airspace, Tomahawk missiles were already in flight from submarines in the Persian Gulf. Operation Epic Fury hit over a thousand targets in its opening ho...

Between the gamblers and the disappeared, there is almost no space left for the old model: the person who plants a tree knowing they'll never sit in its shade.

@Daojoan · Mar 13

+12
@Daojoan and 14 others

After outages, Amazon to make senior engineers sign off on AI-assisted changes

arstechnica.com  ·  29 people

AWS has suffered at least two incidents linked to the use of AI coding assistants. See full article...

1. YES THEY ARE.

They are vibe-coding mission-critical AWS modules. They are generating tech debt at scale. They don't THINK that that's what they're doing. Do you think most programmers conceive of their daily (non-LLM) activities as "putting in lots of bugs"? No, that is never what we say we're doing. Yet, we turn around, and there all the bugs are.

With LLMs, we can look at the mission-critical AWS modules and ask after the fact, were they vibe-coded? AWS says yes

@glyph · Mar 13

+26
@glyph and 28 others

Willingness to look stupid is a genuine moat in creative work

sharif.io  ·  16 people Worth reading

Looking foolish is underrated.

Willingness to look stupid

Link:
Discussion:

@hn500 · Mar 13

+13
@hn500 and 15 others

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