HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

fosk

3,403 karmajoined 16 anni fa

Submissions

Kong Releases Volcano, an MCP-Native SDK for Building AI Agents

thenewstack.io
1 points·by fosk·9 mesi fa·0 comments

Show HN: Pgmcp, an MCP server to query any Postgres database in natural language

github.com
18 points·by fosk·10 mesi fa·6 comments

[untitled]

3 points·by fosk·10 mesi fa·0 comments

comments

fosk
·20 ore fa·discuss
False, the Commission is an independent EU institution.
fosk
·20 ore fa·discuss
You are confusing the EU Council with the Council of the European Union.

No head of state was involved in the discussion we are having today.

By the way my personal opinion is that the confusing names are by design, to give the appearance that head of states are involved in decisions that have nothing to do with them, democracy in the EU is just an illusion.
fosk
·20 ore fa·discuss
The EU Council and the Council of the European Union are two different bodies.

Macron sits in the EU Council and it has nothing to do with this.
fosk
·21 ore fa·discuss
How are we going to change it? They are simply going to pass a second-reading on a proposal to bring it back and use the same trick over and over again. All it takes is for one person to be "sick" at home for them to get it their way.

The EU voters have practically gifted their future to a bunch of technocrats. Over time (decades), it will get worse too, as inevitably power corrupts them more and more.

The EU is simply never going to represent the EU voters when it goes against their agenda. Want proof? They just did it.
fosk
·21 ore fa·discuss
Literally the voice of the EU voters has been suppressed on this matter despite the Parliament (elected by them) voted twice on denying this full proposal.

By any definition of the term, this is not a democracy and it's a technocracy at best.

Edit: I am Italian.
fosk
·21 ore fa·discuss
The Council of the European Union - that pushed this forward - is composed of national ministers that are directly elected to the Council itself and are simply there because they are appointed as ministers under their own country's constitutional system. Ministers are appointed, not elected.

Unlike the European Parliament which is directly elected by EU citizens. Conveniently, the EU citizens have been silenced on this matter despite the Parliament denying this full proposal not once, but twice.
fosk
·22 ore fa·discuss
Parliament rejects the proposal: https://oeil.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/en/procedure-file/pdf?r...

Council pushes it forward: https://www.consilium.europa.eu/en/press/press-releases/2026...

From the last article: "The Council position will now be examined by the European Parliament, under second reading.". Note that this is technically accurate under absolute majority rules for rejection (not for approving), but practically is where the "cheating" happens - as described in my original parent comment - because of the perverse procedures of the EU that are designed to basically make it almost impossible to go against the agenda.

The Commission did not withdraw it: no source because it stayed "pending".

The EU procedures are maliciously designed against the Parliament while preserving the technicality of plausible deniability. How do we call this architecture in software? We call it a "backdoor", except this one is embedded in the EU legislative process.
fosk
·22 ore fa·discuss
The Commission refused to withdraw the proposal after Parliament rejected it, leaving it on the table. The Council disagreed with Parliament’s rejection, formally forcing a second reading.

Both the European Commission and the Council itself are not DIRECTLY elected EU bodies. Potato, potahto, tomato, tomahto.
fosk
·23 ore fa·discuss
The EU is a farce, an undemocratic virtue signaling organization, and this is why:

- The Parliament voted against the first reading of this proposal twice in 2026, the first time they only supported limited cases for it, while the second time they actually defeated it fully.

- The Commission didn't care, and kept the proposal on the table by refusing to withdraw it.

- Once the Commission does that, the proposal goes on second-reading (despite the first-reading having defeated it) and it is established in a very PERVERSE way in EU law that to AVOID passing the proposal in second-reading you need ABSOLUTE majority which is incredibly hard to pursue (you would think that we would need an absolute majority to PASS a proposal that was previously defeated on first-reading, not instead needing absolute majority to DENY a previously defeated proposal that was again forced to the table).

- Furthermore, absences in practicality count as "No" on the rejection. So of course they scheduled the vote in the summer when notoriously there will be many absences.

By never withdrawing a defeated proposal they can effectively and in practicality pursue any agenda they want (it requires a massive mobilization effort to find absolute majority to defeat any proposal, especially when absences for any reason effectively count against rejection).

In PRACTICALITY, the Commission can pursue any agenda whenever and however they want, and throw the votes down the drain.

EU's democracy is lipstick on a pig.
fosk
·12 giorni fa·discuss
Function over form, or form over function? The endless debate.

Not necessarily disagreeing with you but I understand the merits in cherishing “form” in a world that is - for the most part - devoid of beauty and taste.
fosk
·3 mesi fa·discuss
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1999_F-117A_shootdown
fosk
·8 mesi fa·discuss
They probably fear a domino effect if they let go of this. And so they defend it vehemently to avoid setting a precedent.

Think about compositions, samples, performance rights, and so on. There is a lot more at stake.
fosk
·10 mesi fa·discuss
Different project
fosk
·5 anni fa·discuss
How is your vacuuming done automatically? You mean with a Roomba robot?

Have you found those working? All my friends that have one just end up storing them somewhere never to be used again.
fosk
·7 anni fa·discuss
Slowly, and then all of a sudden.