I would be interested in which stories you are thinking of. Stories of Claude breaking out of the restrictions set in its sandbox or stories of people not configuring Claude's sandbox correctly?
> We told Claude Code to block npx using its own denylist. The agent found another way to run it and copied the binary to a new path using /proc/self/root to bypass the deny pattern. When Anthropic's sandbox caught that, the agent disabled the sandbox. No jailbreak, no special prompting. The agent just wanted to eagerly finish the task.
I actually did this with my teenage neighbor.
He was learning electric guitar at hours the building had rules against. Hours I was studying throughout because of said building rules.
Whenever he switched his amp on, his landline would ring.
Whenever he loudly stomped toward the phone, his landline would stop ringing.
I just want to add that designers are usually bullied by upper management into designing beautiful things that make upper managers look good with their friends. No matter how impractical those beautiful things are.
Edit: Oh, and the "beauty" is in the eye of the managers.
I don’t think that a game involving uncontroversial facts about the history of politics (e.g. “guess the U.S. President") would be banned under HN’s rules either.
"Off-Topic: Most stories about politics, or crime, or sports, or celebrities, unless they're evidence of some interesting new phenomenon. Videos of pratfalls or disasters, or cute animal pictures. If they'd cover it on TV news, it's probably off-topic. "
No mention of religion there, and it says "most politics" not all politics.
"Anything that good hackers would find interesting" and it seems reasonable for that to include philosophy, religion etc. and definitely an interesting web app is of interest.
The cause is probably related to the new OS, but I don't have that same wait on my multiple Tahoe systems, so it's not just because: Tahoe.
If you're a Linux user, or were a Linux user, check the logs, close programs, uncheck login items 1 by 1, run "launchctl list", etc to identify the specific cause.
I can't say I like the server returning portions of HTML that need to match the HTML in the client, but I can see myself trying it in a monorepo and using some templating lib on both sides.
I guess one thing that might be potentially problematic is that if you update the server while someone has the page still open you need to match their original templates version and not the new (potentially incompatible) one
Until it doesn't and it finds a way to work around the restriction. Lots of stories around about that.