Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | polynomial's commentslogin

"The gap is larger than most people realize" is a a dead giveaway.

Fully agree.

If you don't change your approach but just use CLI "intead of" MCP, you'll end up with a new spin on the same problems. The guardrails MCP provides (identity, entitlement, multi-principal trust boundaries) still need to exist somewhere.

https://forestmars.substack.com/p/twilight-of-the-mcp-idols


This is the right framing. The chain policy problem is what happens when you ask the registry to be the entitlement layer.

Here's a longer piece on why the trust boundary has to live at the runtime level, not the interface level, and what that means for MCP's actual job: https://forestmars.substack.com/p/twilight-of-the-mcp-idols


Understandable as always a proxy for predictable.


This is the under acknowledged "secret" of this reconfiguration.

It's like the Bill Joy point about mediocre technology taken to the next level.


Robots making fun of us complaining about them.


Well at least you know who to fire


"Petri dish rewrites React in Rust"


Tragically this reference is all but lost generationally.


Born in 1988. It wasn't lost on me. Am I old now too?


Born in 1979 but I don't get it. What is it about?


Mel Brooks' History of the World, Part I[1].

[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-8ihcq4hzR4


This is the equivalent of “only 90’s kids will get this”. Don’t shame others for not knowing a reference you like, share it with them instead.

https://xkcd.com/1053/ (The alt text is particularly relevant)

Though I disagree it would be tragic to lose this reference. It’s not a good movie. It’s basically “say thing, immediately interpret it literally”. Throw in some stereotypes from time to time. Rinse and repeat.


Plastic cutlery is a dead-on perfect analogy.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: