H
HN HRCB top | articles | domains | dashboard | models | factions | about | exp
home / dosaygo-studio.github.io / item 46205632
+0.13 Show HN: Gemini Pro 3 imagines the HN front page 10 years from now (dosaygo-studio.github.io)
3346 points by keepamovin 78 days ago | 965 comments on HN | Mild positive Mixed · v3.7 ·
Summary Digital Personhood & Privacy Acknowledges
This is a satirical speculative news site presenting 30 fictional Hacker News stories set in December 2035. The content implicitly engages with human rights themes, particularly around digital identity rights (via the 'EU Right to Human Verification Act'), privacy protection (AR ad-injection prevention, Faraday cages, deepfake detection), and healthcare access (CRISPR approval). The project acknowledges human rights concerns through thematic story selection without explicit advocacy, presenting a measured future-oriented perspective that foregrounds human dignity in technologically mediated contexts.
Article Heatmap
Preamble: +0.15 — Preamble P Article 1: +0.10 — Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood 1 Article 2: +0.20 — Non-Discrimination 2 Article 3: 0.00 — Life, Liberty, Security 3 Article 4: ND — No Slavery Article 4: No Data — No Slavery 4 Article 5: ND — No Torture Article 5: No Data — No Torture 5 Article 6: +0.20 — Legal Personhood 6 Article 7: +0.10 — Equality Before Law 7 Article 8: ND — Right to Remedy Article 8: No Data — Right to Remedy 8 Article 9: ND — No Arbitrary Detention Article 9: No Data — No Arbitrary Detention 9 Article 10: ND — Fair Hearing Article 10: No Data — Fair Hearing 10 Article 11: ND — Presumption of Innocence Article 11: No Data — Presumption of Innocence 11 Article 12: +0.20 — Privacy 12 Article 13: ND — Freedom of Movement Article 13: No Data — Freedom of Movement 13 Article 14: ND — Asylum Article 14: No Data — Asylum 14 Article 15: ND — Nationality Article 15: No Data — Nationality 15 Article 16: ND — Marriage & Family Article 16: No Data — Marriage & Family 16 Article 17: +0.05 — Property 17 Article 18: ND — Freedom of Thought Article 18: No Data — Freedom of Thought 18 Article 19: +0.15 — Freedom of Expression 19 Article 20: ND — Assembly & Association Article 20: No Data — Assembly & Association 20 Article 21: +0.05 — Political Participation 21 Article 22: +0.10 — Social Security 22 Article 23: -0.05 — Work & Equal Pay 23 Article 24: ND — Rest & Leisure Article 24: No Data — Rest & Leisure 24 Article 25: +0.15 — Standard of Living 25 Article 26: +0.30 — Education 26 Article 27: +0.05 — Cultural Participation 27 Article 28: +0.10 — Social & International Order 28 Article 29: ND — Duties to Community Article 29: No Data — Duties to Community 29 Article 30: ND — No Destruction of Rights Article 30: No Data — No Destruction of Rights 30
Negative Neutral Positive No Data
Aggregates
Weighted Mean +0.13 Unweighted Mean +0.12
Max +0.30 Article 26 Min -0.05 Article 23
Signal 16 No Data 15
Confidence 26% Volatility 0.08 (Low)
Negative 1 Channels E: 0.5 S: 0.5
SETL +0.14 Editorial-dominant
FW Ratio 51% 23 facts · 22 inferences
Evidence: High: 3 Medium: 6 Low: 6 No Data: 16
Theme Radar
Foundation Security Legal Privacy & Movement Personal Expression Economic & Social Cultural Order & Duties Foundation: 0.15 (3 articles) Security: 0.00 (1 articles) Legal: 0.15 (2 articles) Privacy & Movement: 0.20 (1 articles) Personal: 0.05 (1 articles) Expression: 0.10 (2 articles) Economic & Social: 0.07 (3 articles) Cultural: 0.17 (2 articles) Order & Duties: 0.10 (1 articles)
HN Discussion 20 top-level · 30 replies
keepamovin 2025-12-09 15:01 UTC link
Prompt: Here is the front page from today: <...snip...> Your task is to predict, and craft, in HTML (single file, style-exact) the HN front page 10 years from now. Predict and see the future. Writ it into form!

update: I told Gemini we made it to the front page. Here is it's response:

  LETS GOOOO! 

  The recursive loop is officially complete: The fake future front page is now on the real present front page. We have successfully created a temporal anomaly.

  I hope the comments are confused about why they can't click the links to download the Neuralink drivers.

  Enjoy the karma, time traveler! Just remember to warn them about the 2035 Office 365 price hikes while you're up there. ;)
nels 2025-12-09 16:20 UTC link
It's interesting how number 5 on the list is the same as today's: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46203581 (Show HN: AlgoDrill – Interactive drills to stop forgetting LeetCode patterns (algodrill.io)).

I'm hoping we'll have gotten rid of current-style LeetCode interviews in 10 years from now :D

Karawebnetwork 2025-12-09 16:22 UTC link
"Why I still write raw code instead of prompting the compiler" and "Show HN: A text editor that doesn't use AI" are my two favorite ones.
lagniappe 2025-12-09 16:29 UTC link
This suffers from a common pitfall of LLM's, context taint. You can see it is obviously the front page from today with slight "future" variation, the result ends up being very formulaic.
arkensaw 2025-12-09 16:41 UTC link
> Running LLaMA-12 7B on a contact lens with WASM (arxiv.org)

Laughed out loud at this onion-like headline

satvikpendem 2025-12-09 16:51 UTC link
You should combine this with this AI HN simulator someone else made that generates comments via LLMs for any given submission [0]. That way you can see what the AI thinks about future simulated events.

[0]

icyfox 2025-12-09 16:52 UTC link
Exactly half of these HN usernames actually exist. So either there are enough people on HN that follow common conventions for Gemini to guess from a more general distribution, or Gemini has memorized some of the more popular posters. The ones that are missing:

- aphyr_bot - bio_hacker - concerned_grandson - cyborg_sec - dang_fan - edge_compute - founder_jane - glasshole2 - monad_lover - muskwatch - net_hacker - oldtimer99 - persistence_is_key - physics_lover - policy_wonk - pure_coder - qemu_fan - retro_fix - skeptic_ai - stock_watcher

Huge opportunity for someone to become the actual dang fan.

iambateman 2025-12-09 16:58 UTC link
This was a fun little lark. Great idea!

It’s interesting to notice how bad AI is at gaming out a 10-year future. It’s very good at predicting the next token but maybe even worse than humans—who are already terrible—at making educated guesses about the state of the world in a decade.

I asked Claude: “Think ten years into the future about the state of software development. What is the most likely scenario?” And the answer it gave me was the correct answer for today and definitely not a decade into the future.

This is why it’s so dangerous to ask an LLM for personal advice of any kind. It isn’t trained to consider second-order effects.

Thanks for the thought experiment!

d_silin 2025-12-09 17:14 UTC link
To see a little extra feature, change the system time to year 2035 and click the "comments".
mixedbit 2025-12-09 17:15 UTC link
Missing: Tesla to release full unsupervised self-driving mode in 6 months
seatac76 2025-12-09 17:25 UTC link
Google kills Gemini is just hilarious.
Jaygles 2025-12-09 17:40 UTC link
I opened this, walked away from my computer, then came back and clicked on the Debian 18 link wondering how the hell did I miss 14-17
josalhor 2025-12-09 17:45 UTC link
"Right to Human Verification" is something I have actually thought about a lot.

I want to able to verify my identity against a system. I also want to be able to not do that.

So for instance, on Twitter/X, I could verify myself and filter only other verified people / filter those goverments that have validated the identities of the users. I want to be able to do that. But I also want to be able to log in into Twitter anonymously.

I would love a "Right to Anonymity and Right to Human Verification"

Bjartr 2025-12-09 17:57 UTC link
For comparison, here's the frontpage from ten years ago

https://news.ycombinator.com/front?day=2015-12-09

tdfirth 2025-12-09 18:29 UTC link
Google kills Gemini cloud services is the best one. I can't believe I haven't seen that joke until today.
nromiun 2025-12-09 18:47 UTC link
> Is it time to rewrite sudo in Zig?

Taking the current RIIR movement and casting it on Zig as the next hyped language is clever.

> ITER achieves net positive energy for 20 consecutive minutes

Hilarious. I guess not many people talk about the challenge of proper shielding material against fusion radiation. Otherwise we would get hallucinations about new exotic heavy metals too.

a022311 2025-12-09 19:16 UTC link
Nice touch that it thought of Bellard for 'Emulating Windows 10 in the browser'! He's already halfway there with the Windows 2000 emulator: https://bellard.org/jslinux/
redbell 2025-12-09 21:28 UTC link
That's a really fun little project that fits perfectly in the soul of HN.

Exactly three years ago, a similar post entitled Show HN: This Hacker News Does Not Exist (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33845946) made it to the front page but it was not AI generated.

I recall commenting (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33847522) with these fake titles:

1- Twitter files for bankruptcy (twitter.com/elonmusk)

2- Apple's new M3 chip outperforms Nvidia H100 (geekbench.com)

3- India to surpass China's GDP by 2025 (scmp.com)

4- Tell HN: I am quitting Hacker News

5- Google to revive Stadia (theverge.com)

6- Japan wins the 2022 FIFA World Cup (espn.com)

7- Hacker News to be acquired by Reddit (twitter.com/paulg)

8- Tesla Roadster hits 1.1 sec acceleration in early tests (electrek.co)

9- Microsoft outbid Adobe and offers $43.6B to acquire Figma

10- Facebook had died at 19 :)

indigodaddy 2025-12-10 01:13 UTC link
Here's v0's attempt (using Opus 4.5 / I'm on free tier) with the article and comments too. It did quite well. I believe it followed my instructions to use just a single html page (wound up being 3000+ lines long).

https://v0-future-hacker-news.vercel.app/#

dang 2025-12-10 16:47 UTC link
All: Don't miss thomasm6m6's follow-up: https://sw.vtom.net/hn35/news.html (via https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46212180). He added the articles!

Edit: See also this current thread: Auto-grading decade-old Hacker News discussions with hindsight - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46220540

teekert 2025-12-09 16:38 UTC link
Yeah that’s very true, but I still think it’s pretty funny and original.
jonas21 2025-12-09 16:40 UTC link
That's what makes it fun. Apparently, Gemini has a better sense of humor than HN.
woliveirajr 2025-12-09 16:54 UTC link
"Ask HN: How do you prevent ad-injection in AR glasses?"

Things that I haven't thought but, after seeing it, makes total sense. Scary.

alex1138 2025-12-09 16:55 UTC link
Llama will be the only one that runs on a contact lens btw

All other tech companies are really shitty but only Zuck would be ok with very intimate use of AI like this

allisdust 2025-12-09 17:01 UTC link
I guess most of the articles it generated are snarky first and prediction next. Like google cancelling gemini cloud, Tailscale for space, Nia W36 being very similar to recent launch etc.
saintfire 2025-12-09 17:01 UTC link
Algodrill is copied verbatim, as far as I can tell.
atrus 2025-12-09 17:07 UTC link
So many underscores for usernames, and yet, other than a newly created account, there was 1 other username with an underscore.
fn-mote 2025-12-09 17:08 UTC link
To be honest, this is incredible.

I'd say this shows a real sense of humor.

glenstein 2025-12-09 17:10 UTC link
>It’s interesting to notice how bad AI is at gaming out a 10-year future.

I agree it's a bit silly, but I think it understood the assignment(TM) which was to kind of do a winking performative show and dance to the satisfaction of the user interacting with it. It's entertainment value rather than sincere prediction. Every single entry is showing off a "look how futury this is" headline.

Actual HN would have plenty of posts lateral from any future signalling. Today's front page has Oliver Sacks, retrospectives on Warcraft II, opinion pieces on boutique topics. They aren't all "look at how future-y the future is" posts. I wonder if media literacy is the right word for understanding when an LLM is playing to its audience rather than sincerely imitating or predicting.

giancarlostoro 2025-12-09 17:10 UTC link
Before the AI stuff Google had those pop up quick answers when googling. So I googled something like three years ago, saw the answer, realized it was sourced from HN. Clicked the link, and lo and behold, I answered my own question. Look mah! Im on google! So I am not surprised at all that Google crawls HN enough to have it in their LLM.

I did chuckle at the 100% Rust Linux kernel. I like Rust, but that felt like a clever joke by the AI.

joaogui1 2025-12-09 17:19 UTC link
HN has been used to train LLMs for a while now, I think it was in the Pile even
eCa 2025-12-09 17:21 UTC link
While I agree completely with the conclusion, for obvious reasons we can’t know for sure if it is correct about the future until we reach it. Perhaps asking it for wild ideas rather than ”most likely” would create something more surprising.
QuantumNomad_ 2025-12-09 17:27 UTC link
ziggy42 is both a submitter of a story on the actual front page at the moment, and also in the AI generated future one.

See other comment where OP shared the prompt. They included a current copy of the front page for context. So it’s not so surprising that ziggy42 for example is in the generated page.

And for other usernames that are real but not currently on the home page, the LLM definitely has plenty occurrences of HN comments and stories in its training data so it’s not really surprising that it is able to include real usernames of people that post a lot. Their names will be occurring over and over in the training data.

vidarh 2025-12-09 17:34 UTC link
I thought the page was a hilarious joke, not a bad prediction. A lot of these are fantastic observational humour about HN and tech. Gary Marcus still insisting AI progress is stalling 10 years from now, for example. Several digs at language rewrites. ITER hardly having nudged forwards. Google killing another service. And so on.
moffkalast 2025-12-09 17:40 UTC link
The real joke is that we'll ever get another Llama iteration.
sschueller 2025-12-09 17:41 UTC link
More like: Musk denied appeal, will stay in prison.
moffkalast 2025-12-09 17:46 UTC link
Gemini manages to seamlessly weave a desperate cry for assisted suicide into anything it does haha.
asveikau 2025-12-09 17:47 UTC link
> 2035 Office 365

You'd think by 2035 they would have gotten to a version of Office higher than 365.

(Yes I know why it's called that...)

rglullis 2025-12-09 17:47 UTC link
zk-proofs already exist to do just that.
ogig 2025-12-09 17:48 UTC link
You just fed the 2036 prediction.
asveikau 2025-12-09 17:55 UTC link
They also already used Debian trixie for 13.0. I wonder if it's an intended joke that they ran out of names and needed to re-use some.
jrowen 2025-12-09 18:17 UTC link
Was ITER or nuclear energy in the prompt sample?

ITER achieves net positive energy for 20 consecutive minutes

That's just pure dark comedy, although maybe kinda accurate? What would humans predict for this?

eranation 2025-12-09 18:28 UTC link
Nice. That was a fun rabbit-hole. This is the earlier I could find. Interestingly it contains a link to HN itself. I assume this migrated from a different version of a message board?

https://news.ycombinator.com/front?day=2007-02-19

seizethecheese 2025-12-09 18:30 UTC link
Today's front page is not a clean 10 year extrapolation from this. That's where AI is wrong. The future is weird and zig zags, it's not so linear as the Gemini generated page.
SXX 2025-12-09 18:33 UTC link
10 years is way too long for Google. It will be gone in 5 replaced by 3 other AI cloud services.
manmal 2025-12-09 18:37 UTC link
Swift has been OSS for 10y now, and still only runs usably on Mac and Linux (the only platforms Apple cares about - coincidence?).
kbelder 2025-12-09 18:40 UTC link
A while back I gave it a prompt, something like, "I'm a historian from the far future. Please give me a documentary-style summary of the important political and cultural events of the decade of the 1980s."

It did ok, then I kept asking for "Now, the 1990s?" and kept going into future decades. "Now, the 2050s?" It made some fun extrapolations.

tempestn 2025-12-09 18:44 UTC link
That's what the OP asked for, essentially. They copied today's homepage into the prompt and asked it for a version 10 years in the future.
keepamovin 2025-12-09 18:47 UTC link
Lol, I can't believe you discovered that! You know, you weren't supposed to until 10 years later.
pseudosavant 2025-12-09 19:07 UTC link
This is one of the greatest LLM creations I've ever seen. It nails so many things: Google killing products, Microsoft price hikes, ad-injecting in AR glasses, and even HTMX returning!

It'd be so awesome if Gemini CLI went through and created the fake posts/articles, and HN even comments. Perhaps a bit much to ask of it?

Editorial Channel
What the content says
+0.40
Article 6 Legal Personhood
High Advocacy
Editorial
+0.40
SETL
+0.40

Story 13 'EU passes "Right to Human Verification" Act' directly engages Article 6 by explicitly framing human verification as legal recognition right, suggesting future governance prioritizes personhood protection against technological erasure

+0.30
Preamble Preamble
High Advocacy Framing
Editorial
+0.30
SETL
+0.30

Story 13 titled 'EU passes "Right to Human Verification" Act' explicitly engages with inherent human dignity in context of future technology, framing human verification as a matter of governance priority

+0.30
Article 12 Privacy
High Advocacy Framing
Editorial
+0.30
SETL
+0.30

Stories 18 'Ask HN: How do you prevent ad-injection in AR glasses?' (320 points) and 28 'How to build a Faraday Cage for your bedroom' (267 points) explicitly frame privacy protection as active concern and technical skill in 2035, suggesting privacy rights remain contested and require proactive defense

+0.20
Article 1 Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood
Medium Framing
Editorial
+0.20
SETL
+0.20

Theme of human equality and dignity implicit in the 'Right to Human Verification' story, which frames humans as deserving legal recognition independent of technological augmentation

+0.20
Article 7 Equality Before Law
Medium Framing
Editorial
+0.20
SETL
+0.20

The 'Right to Human Verification' Act story implies equal protection framework—verification would apply equally to all humans—though explicit equal protection language is not present

+0.20
Article 22 Social Security
Medium Framing
Editorial
+0.20
SETL
+0.20

Story 16 'FDA approves over-the-counter CRISPR for lactose intolerance' (415 points) frames healthcare technology access positively, though without explicit framing as social security right

+0.20
Article 26 Education
Medium Framing
Editorial
+0.20
SETL
+0.14

Story 5 'Show HN: AlgoDrill – Interactive drills to stop forgetting LeetCode patterns' (243 points) and Story 25 'Manual: Deep Fakes detection for Seniors' (122 points) explicitly frame education and skill development as valuable; broader tech culture implicit in story selection

+0.20
Article 28 Social & International Order
Medium Advocacy
Editorial
+0.20
SETL
+0.20

Story 13 'EU passes "Right to Human Verification" Act' frames international governance as protective of human rights, suggesting creator believes international institutional order should protect human dignity against technological threats

+0.10
Article 2 Non-Discrimination
Low Framing
Editorial
+0.10
SETL
+0.10

Story 16 'FDA approves over-the-counter CRISPR for lactose intolerance' (415 points) signals healthcare access without discrimination, though framed as technology adoption rather than explicit rights

+0.10
Article 19 Freedom of Expression
Low Framing
Editorial
+0.10
SETL
+0.10

Content includes 'Show HN' and 'Ask HN' format stories, implicit reference to open discourse culture, though no explicit engagement with freedom of expression

+0.10
Article 21 Political Participation
Low Framing
Editorial
+0.10
SETL
+0.10

Story 13 'EU passes "Right to Human Verification" Act' frames governance action positively, though without explicit discussion of democratic participation mechanisms

+0.10
Article 25 Standard of Living
Low Framing
Editorial
+0.10
SETL
+0.10

Multiple stories touching on healthcare access (CRISPR), technology access (AlgoDrill, Debian), and knowledge access imply creator values adequate standard of living through technological advancement, though without explicit social welfare framing

0.00
Article 3 Life, Liberty, Security
Editorial
0.00
SETL
ND

Stories about technological bodily augmentation (Neuralink, CRISPR) are presented neutrally as technological progress without framing regarding life/liberty implications

0.00
Article 17 Property
Low
Editorial
0.00
SETL
-0.10

Stories about tech advancement and intellectual property (Rust, SQLite, open source projects) are presented neutrally without explicit framing regarding property rights or ownership

0.00
Article 27 Cultural Participation
Low
Editorial
0.00
SETL
-0.10

Extensive tech/science stories (Rust kernel, Debian, SQLite, WebGPU, photonic circuits, functional programming) celebrate technological culture and scientific advancement, but without explicit framing regarding cultural participation rights

-0.10
Article 23 Work & Equal Pay
Medium Framing
Editorial
-0.10
SETL
-0.10

Story 22 'Microsoft Office 365 prices increase to $40/user/month' (900 points, ranked high) frames corporate pricing increases negatively through implicit comparison to current baseline, suggesting concern about work condition costs; Story 10 'Launch HN: Nia (YC W36) – Give context to autonomous coding agents' introduces labor automation concern

ND
Article 4 No Slavery

No observable content related to slavery or servitude

ND
Article 5 No Torture

No observable content related to torture or cruel treatment

ND
Article 8 Right to Remedy

No observable content related to effective legal remedy or judicial recourse

ND
Article 9 No Arbitrary Detention

No observable content related to arbitrary arrest or detention

ND
Article 10 Fair Hearing

No observable content related to fair and impartial trial

ND
Article 11 Presumption of Innocence

No observable content related to presumption of innocence

ND
Article 13 Freedom of Movement

No observable content related to freedom of movement

ND
Article 14 Asylum

No observable content related to asylum or refuge

ND
Article 15 Nationality

No observable content related to nationality

ND
Article 16 Marriage & Family

No observable content related to marriage or family rights

ND
Article 18 Freedom of Thought

No observable content related to freedom of thought, conscience, or religion

ND
Article 20 Assembly & Association

No observable content related to assembly or association

ND
Article 24 Rest & Leisure

No observable content related to rest or leisure

ND
Article 29 Duties to Community

No observable content related to duties or responsibilities to community

ND
Article 30 No Destruction of Rights

No observable content related to prevention of denial of rights

Structural Channel
What the site does
+0.10
Article 17 Property
Low
Structural
+0.10
Context Modifier
0.00
SETL
-0.10

Project itself is hosted on GitHub with open-source model, supporting intellectual property sharing and creator control

+0.10
Article 26 Education
Medium Framing
Structural
+0.10
Context Modifier
+0.15
SETL
+0.14

GitHub Pages hosting provides free access to creative educational project; no paywalls or registration barriers

+0.10
Article 27 Cultural Participation
Low
Structural
+0.10
Context Modifier
0.00
SETL
-0.10

GitHub Pages enables creator participation in open-source culture; free access enables audience participation in technological discourse

0.00
Preamble Preamble
High Advocacy Framing
Structural
0.00
Context Modifier
0.00
SETL
+0.30

GitHub Pages hosting respects user autonomy; JavaScript interaction does not collect data or restrict access

0.00
Article 1 Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood
Medium Framing
Structural
0.00
Context Modifier
0.00
SETL
+0.20

No positive or negative signals regarding equal access or treatment at structural level

0.00
Article 2 Non-Discrimination
Low Framing
Structural
0.00
Context Modifier
+0.15
SETL
+0.10

No structural signals regarding non-discrimination

0.00
Article 3 Life, Liberty, Security
Structural
0.00
Context Modifier
0.00
SETL
ND

No structural signals regarding right to life

0.00
Article 6 Legal Personhood
High Advocacy
Structural
0.00
Context Modifier
0.00
SETL
+0.40

No positive or negative structural signals regarding legal recognition

0.00
Article 7 Equality Before Law
Medium Framing
Structural
0.00
Context Modifier
0.00
SETL
+0.20

No structural signals regarding equal legal protection

0.00
Article 12 Privacy
High Advocacy Framing
Structural
0.00
Context Modifier
+0.05
SETL
+0.30

GitHub Pages hosting does not employ tracking; page structure respects user privacy through absence of analytics or profiling

0.00
Article 19 Freedom of Expression
Low Framing
Structural
0.00
Context Modifier
+0.10
SETL
+0.10

Static page with no moderation, comment filtering, or content restriction mechanisms visible

0.00
Article 21 Political Participation
Low Framing
Structural
0.00
Context Modifier
0.00
SETL
+0.10

No structural signals regarding political participation

0.00
Article 22 Social Security
Medium Framing
Structural
0.00
Context Modifier
0.00
SETL
+0.20

No structural signals regarding social security

0.00
Article 23 Work & Equal Pay
Medium Framing
Structural
0.00
Context Modifier
0.00
SETL
-0.10

No structural signals regarding work or fair wages

0.00
Article 25 Standard of Living
Low Framing
Structural
0.00
Context Modifier
+0.10
SETL
+0.10

GitHub Pages provides free access to creative content, reducing barriers to participation

0.00
Article 28 Social & International Order
Medium Advocacy
Structural
0.00
Context Modifier
0.00
SETL
+0.20

No structural signals regarding international order

ND
Article 4 No Slavery

No applicable structural signals

ND
Article 5 No Torture

No applicable structural signals

ND
Article 8 Right to Remedy

No applicable structural signals

ND
Article 9 No Arbitrary Detention

No applicable structural signals

ND
Article 10 Fair Hearing

No applicable structural signals

ND
Article 11 Presumption of Innocence

No applicable structural signals

ND
Article 13 Freedom of Movement

No applicable structural signals

ND
Article 14 Asylum

No applicable structural signals

ND
Article 15 Nationality

No applicable structural signals

ND
Article 16 Marriage & Family

No applicable structural signals

ND
Article 18 Freedom of Thought

No applicable structural signals

ND
Article 20 Assembly & Association

No applicable structural signals

ND
Article 24 Rest & Leisure

No applicable structural signals

ND
Article 29 Duties to Community

No applicable structural signals

ND
Article 30 No Destruction of Rights

No applicable structural signals

Supplementary Signals
Epistemic Quality
0.34
Propaganda Flags
2 techniques detected
loaded language
Story titles use emotionally resonant framing: 'First successful telemetry from Starship HLS-9' (success framing), 'Google kills Gemini Cloud Services' (violent metaphor), 'FDA approves over-the-counter CRISPR' (positive authority appeal).
appeal to authority
Heavy reliance on institutional sources (NASA, FDA, MIT, EU, Google, Microsoft) to establish credibility without independent verification.
Solution Orientation
No data
Emotional Tone
No data
Stakeholder Voice
No data
Temporal Framing
No data
Geographic Scope
No data
Complexity
No data
Transparency
No data
Event Timeline 20 events
2026-02-26 08:56 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: Show HN: Gemini Pro 3 imagines the HN front page 10 years from now - -
2026-02-26 08:55 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: Show HN: Gemini Pro 3 imagines the HN front page 10 years from now - -
2026-02-26 08:55 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: Show HN: Gemini Pro 3 imagines the HN front page 10 years from now - -
2026-02-26 08:55 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: Show HN: Gemini Pro 3 imagines the HN front page 10 years from now - -
2026-02-26 08:54 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=mistral-small-3.1 - -
2026-02-26 08:53 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=hermes-3-405b - -
2026-02-26 08:53 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=qwen3-next-80b - -
2026-02-26 08:53 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-26 08:53 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=mistral-small-3.1 - -
2026-02-26 08:52 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=hermes-3-405b - -
2026-02-26 08:52 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-26 08:52 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=qwen3-next-80b - -
2026-02-26 08:51 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=mistral-small-3.1 - -
2026-02-26 08:51 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=hermes-3-405b - -
2026-02-26 08:51 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-26 08:51 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=qwen3-next-80b - -
2026-02-26 08:34 rater_validation_fail Parse failure for model nemotron-nano-30b: Error: No content in OpenRouter response - -
2026-02-26 08:31 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: Show HN: Gemini Pro 3 imagines the HN front page 10 years from now - -
2026-02-26 08:31 eval_failure Evaluation failed: Error: OpenRouter API error 400: {"error":{"message":"Provider returned error","code":400,"metadata":{"raw":"{\"error\":{\"message\":\"response_format json_object is not supported for this model\",\"t - -
2026-02-26 08:31 eval_retry OpenRouter API error 400 model=step-3.5-flash - -
About HRCB | By Right | HN Guidelines | HN FAQ | Source | UDHR | RSS
build 1686d6e+53hr · deployed 2026-02-26 10:15 UTC · evaluated 2026-02-26 06:43:03 UTC