Debug Project
79 points by Eridanus2 2 hours ago | 34 comments

hackyhacky 2 hours ago
The domain name reminds me of the venerable DOS "debug.com" command, which managed to combine an interactive and scriptable debugger, assembler, and disassembler into a program weighing a few kilobytes. I spent many long hours in my youth using it to reverse engineering copy protection on games. I really wish we had a similar tool for the modern era.
reply
modeless 21 minutes ago
WinDbg?
reply
hackyhacky 17 minutes ago
WinDbg is a cool, but debug.com predates it by quite a bit.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debug_(command)

reply
modeless 15 minutes ago
Thus making it "a similar tool for the modern era" as you were asking for, IMO.

My favorite thing about WinDbg is that many people pronounce it "Windbag".

reply
hackyhacky 5 minutes ago
WinDbg is just a debugger: it does not assemble or disassemble. It can't patch running programs in memory. Moreover, I don't consider Windows to be part of the modern era, as I haven't used a Windows machine for 20 years.

So, no, WinDbg has nothing to do with debug.com.

reply
lucb1e 15 minutes ago
Okay, but is it not what you wished for, "a similar tool for the modern era"?

edit: I see I simul-posted with u/modeless, but I can't remove it now that there's a (duplicate) reply. Maybe mods can remove or at least collapse it. I'll check again in a few minutes if u/hackyhacky removes the reply, then maybe it allows me to remove this post

reply
hackyhacky 5 minutes ago
WinDbg is just a debugger: it does not assemble or disassemble. It can't patch running programs in memory. Moreover, I don't consider Windows to be part of the modern era, as I haven't used a Windows machine for 20 years.

So, no, WinDbg has nothing to do with debug.com.

reply
goda90 57 minutes ago
A less high-tech way to reduce mosquitoes in your own back yard is to set up an attractive nesting location, such as a bucket filled with plant cuttings and water with protection from the rain, and putting Bti(Bacillus thuringiensis subspecies israelensis) in it. Bti will kill the larvae after they hatch. You can buy Bti pretty easily, usually in a dehydrated form called mosquitoes bits or mosquito dunks. Make sure to remove other potential nesting locations or add Bti to them too.
reply
adrianmonk 14 minutes ago
The symmetry is amusing. This is really fighting fire with fire.

Mosquitoes are a vector that spreads disease-causing germs to a population. The proposed solution is to use different mosquitoes as different vector that spreads a different disease-causing germ to a different population.

reply
barbazoo 26 seconds ago
> raise sterile males and release them into wild insect populations. When a wild female mates with a sterile male, her eggs won’t hatch. The population gets smaller with each generation.

They won't harm then it sounds like, they'll just not fertilize the eggs.

reply
adityamwagh 2 hours ago
This is a great initiative. HOWEVER, THIS IS NOT NEW. This has already been tried and tested successfully in Singapore.

https://www.nea.gov.sg/corporate-functions/resources/researc...

reply
sgurnoor 56 minutes ago
Seems like you’re referring to the same initiative - https://blog.debug.com/2026/05/debug-expands-in-singapore-bu...
reply
bsimpson 53 minutes ago
Glad to see movement here!

It's been so long since I've heard about Debug that I was afraid it was cancelled.

reply
mihaelm 57 minutes ago
More generally, it's known as the sterile insect technique and you'll find plenty of campaigns with some googling.
reply
king_zee 2 hours ago
Is this safe? I hope it doesn't affect the ecology in worse ways we won't foresee, it has happened before
reply
frankus 58 minutes ago
In the FAQ they discuss how in most of its range this particular species is invasive, feeds almost exclusively on humans, and is not believed to be a major food source for predators.
reply
dekhn 39 minutes ago
It's impossible to prove this (or really anything in human health/global ecology) is safe. We cannot reliably predict what the true short and long term outcomes will be, but by and large, this seems like one of the less unsafe ecological modification projects based on the underlying technology.
reply
ventana 2 hours ago
Cool project! And, surely, absolutely not what I expected to see when I clicked the domain "debug.com".
reply
rcv 49 minutes ago
I was about to ask how the mosquitos survive long enough to make an impact if they can't "bite". I looked it up, and apparently male mosquitos survive off of nectar and are actually pollinators.

Eliminating mosquitoes sounds great to me on the surface, but I wonder if it will have any adverse effects on any plants that rely on them for pollination, or if it's expected that there are plenty of other insects ready to fill any void they leave.

reply
jaggederest 39 minutes ago
It's more the latter - as far as I am aware, eliminating specifically the human pathogenic mosquitoes will still leave plenty of other mosquito-adjacent species that can't or don't bite humans, or can't / don't transmit the critical diseases.

I think for the releasing-sterile-mosquitoes angle, it's actually more interesting to me to use some kind of molecular clock, I think I read about a genetic modification that resulted in a generation or two of fertile males, but then the Nth generation is sterile as a result of the molecular clock unwinding.

reply
mihaelm 45 minutes ago
Less mosquitoes, more bees please :)
reply
oersted 2 hours ago
This must have been inspired by Mass Effect :)

(probably the other way around, but what's the fun in that)

The Krogans got punitively infected with the genophage to drastically reduce successful births after their rebellion.

reply
yboris 2 hours ago
Relevant write up about this: https://www.goodthoughts.blog/p/google-mosquitoes

Google Mosquitoes - Debugging Florida

reply
strongpigeon 2 hours ago
This is cool, but wasn't this a "Verily" project about 10 years ago? What is new here and what has happened since then?
reply
dekhn 44 minutes ago
It looks like the project has been decoupled from Verily (based on my poking about on the website) and is hosted within Google (the project lead, Linus Upson, worked for both Google and Verily simultaneously; he was mainly an eng manager/project lead, but had some historical experience with biology in school). Linus played a critical role at Google and built an awful lot of goodwill with the leadership.

Linus's LinkedIn indicates debug moved from verily to google in Dec 2024 (I missed this at the time). Debug was always a passion project (unlikely to make a huge amount of money compared to ads, AI, and cloud) and Verily's transition to something that lost less money probably required them to move Debug back to Google.

reply
s3graham 59 minutes ago
(2017)

Unless there's been some new announcement that I don't obviously see here?

reply
ChrisArchitect 53 minutes ago
The current news:

Google wants to release up to 32M good mosquitoes California and Florida

https://ktla.com/news/google-wants-to-release-up-to-32-milli... (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48351077)

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/jun/01/google-pe...

(perhaps one of these should be the submitted link)

reply
SilverElfin 57 minutes ago
No thanks. I’m very concerned some short term thinking behind a plan to alter the biology of our environment will have various side effects no one anticipated. It has happened many, many times before. Same with geo engineering in general - hard to trust the incentives, competency, and long term side effects.
reply
modeless 19 minutes ago
The species is not native. Surely we can agree that eradicating non-native species is a good thing?
reply
scubbo 15 minutes ago
> Surely we can agree that eradicating non-native species is a good thing?

So...which areas is humanity native to?

reply
SilverElfin 8 minutes ago
Yes but you’re assuming that whatever they put into our environment will target that perfectly. I’m concerned there’ll be other effects and that such releases aren’t reversible.
reply
righthand 2 hours ago
This is a Google project?
reply
ChrisArchitect 2 hours ago
This project has like 10 years of history behind it right? Originally powered by Verily Life Sciences (inside Alphabet's Google X research div)

Some previous discussion:

We’re trying to stop bad mosquitoes by raising and releasing good ones (2016)

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=12657034

Google Has a Plan to Eliminate Mosquitoes (2018)

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=18551465

reply
booleandilemma 2 hours ago
[dead]
reply