2026-03-28 00:00:39
The difference between a professional writer and an amateur is rarely raw talent.
It is usually behavior.
Amateurs tend to think the gap is vocabulary, creativity, or some mysterious “gift” that makes one person naturally publishable and another not. Professionals know better.
Professional writers do a few unglamorous things over and over again that amateurs either avoid, underestimate, or postpone until “later.” That is why pros finish more, publish more, improve faster, and usually sound sharper even when they are writing on a deadline, with a headache, and on their third cup of bad coffee.
Here is what they do differently.
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Amateurs treat inspiration like a requirement. Professionals treat it like a bonus.
A professional writer knows that waiting to “feel ready” is a great way to produce very little. They write when the mood is there, but they also write when it is not. They have learned a hard truth: momentum usually shows up after the work begins, not before.
That consistency compounds. One writer produces a few bursts of brilliance a year. Another produces solid work every week. The second writer usually wins.
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Amateurs often imagine good writers get it right the first time. Professionals know the first draft is usually just the raw material.
A strong piece of writing is rarely the product of one clean pass. It is the result of cutting, rearranging, clarifying, tightening, and removing the parts that sounded smarter in the writer’s head than they do on the page.
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Amateur writing is often self-expression. Professional writing is communication.
Professionals constantly ask questions amateurs forget to ask:
This is one of the biggest differences between writing that feels indulgent and writing that feels effective. Professionals respect the reader’s time. They know clarity is not a downgrade from intelligence. It is evidence of control.
\
:::tip Have a story you can’t wait to share right away? Take a stab at this writing template here!
:::
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Every writer has written a sentence they were absurdly proud of. Professionals are simply more willing to delete it.
Amateurs often keep lines because they are clever, ornate, or emotionally satisfying. Professionals keep lines because they serve the piece. If a beautiful sentence slows down the argument, muddies the point, or pulls attention away from the main idea, it goes.
That kind of detachment is hard. It feels a little like betrayal. But it is one of the clearest markers of maturity.
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Amateurs often focus on the sentence level too early. They polish lines before they know whether the article, essay, or chapter is even built correctly.
Professionals know structure is what makes writing feel inevitable. If the logic is weak, the transitions are clumsy, or the pacing is off, no amount of verbal sparkle will save it.
What separates professionals from amateurs isn't talent or the "perfect" setup - it’s the unglamorous reality of habit and discipline. Because the gap is built on standards rather than secrets, it is trainable. You don’t find the line between amateur and pro; you cross it in private, one boring, disciplined decision at a time.
\
:::tip Feeling confident? Start your HackerNoon top story with this writing template!
:::
\
HackerNoon’s Blogging Course is designed for beginners and writers who’ve published a bit and want to level up. It’s organized into 8 modules created by experienced writers and editors, and it includes topics like:
\
:::tip Sign up for the HackerNoon Blogging Course today!
:::
\ That’s it for today.
Until next time, Hackers!
\
2026-03-27 23:30:39
Startups love speed.
Ship fast. Test fast. Acquire fast. Scale fast. Growth is the religion, and every team wants to find the repeatable playbook that turns attention into users and users into revenue.
That mindset works for many audiences. It works for impulse buyers. It works for broad consumer apps. It even works for some B2B funnels where polished landing pages and persuasive demos can create enough momentum to close a deal.
But developers are different.
You can get a developer to click with good distribution. You can get a developer to visit your site with a sharp headline. You can even get a developer to try your product once through curiosity, community buzz, or a well-timed launch.
What you cannot do is growth-hack trust.
And that is where many startup marketing teams fail.
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A lot of startup marketing is built on controlled perception. The homepage is designed to lead with confidence. The messaging is crafted to sound category-defining. The product is framed as the future, the breakthrough, the easiest, fastest, most powerful way to solve a painful problem.
Developers are trained to be skeptical of that language.
They live in systems where things either work or do not. Code compiles or it breaks. APIs return what they promise, or they fail in production. Documentation is either useful or a waste of time. A platform is either reliable under pressure, or it becomes a liability.
That mindset shapes how developers evaluate products.
They do not begin with belief. They begin with doubt. Not because they are cynical for the sake of it, but because their job requires them to separate signal from noise. Every tool they adopt has long-term consequences. A wrong choice can create technical debt, wasted engineering time, security exposure, migration pain, and political friction inside a company.
So when marketers lead with exaggerated promises, developers do not get excited. They become alert.
The more polished the claim, the more proof they want.
\
Startup teams often assume trust is built through better messaging. Better copy. Better storytelling. Better positioning. Better campaigns.
Those things help with discovery. They help with framing. They help the right people notice you.
But with developers, trust is built in the product reality that comes after the message.
Can they understand what your tool does in five minutes?
Can they find clear documentation without hunting through vague pages?
Is the quickstart actually quick?
Does the API behave exactly as described?
Are the SDKs maintained?
Are the error messages helpful?
Is pricing understandable?
Can they test the core value before talking to sales?
Do you expose limitations honestly, or hide them behind polished language?
Developers do not decide trust based on what your brand says about itself. They decide to trust based on what happens when they touch the thing.
This is why many startup campaigns create a spike in attention and then quietly collapse. The funnel looks healthy at the top, but trust disappears at the first real interaction.
The ad worked. The product story worked. The launch post worked.
The product truth did not.
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One reason developer trust is so difficult to fake is that developers notice gaps faster than many other audiences.
If your product says “easy integration” but setup takes hours, they notice.
If your site says “built for developers” but your docs are shallow, they notice.
If your open-source repo looks abandoned, they notice.
If your changelog is vague, they notice.
If your pricing forces a demo call before they can understand the basics, they notice.
If your product page is filled with buzzwords but lacks technical depth, they notice.
And once that gap is visible, it changes the relationship immediately.
Because now the developer is not simply evaluating a tool. They are evaluating your honesty.
That is the part many startup marketers underestimate. Developers are not only testing technical quality. They are also testing whether your company respects their time and intelligence.
When they feel manipulated, trust drops fast.
\
A lot of marketing is about persuasion. Developer marketing is more about respect.
Respect means clarity over hype.
Respect means showing real architecture diagrams, code samples, benchmarks, and limitations instead of hiding behind generic promises.
Respect means admitting tradeoffs.
Respect means understanding that technical buyers do not want to be “captured.” They want to make a sound decision.
Respect also means reducing friction in the learning process.
A startup that respects developers makes evaluation easy. It offers real docs, transparent onboarding, accessible pricing, and product surfaces that help someone get to value without unnecessary ceremony.
A startup that does not respect developers usually reveals itself through unnecessary friction. Email gates. demo walls. inflated messaging. shallow content. over-designed landing pages with not enough substance.
Developers do not hate marketing. They hate feeling handled.
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Startup marketers often overestimate the power of their own narrative and underestimate the power of outside validation.
Developers trust other developers more than they trust brand copy.
They trust GitHub activity, community discussions, technical blog posts, independent tutorials, and honest peer feedback. They trust what users say when there is no script. They trust maintainers who show their work. They trust documentation written by people who understand implementation details, not just positioning frameworks.
That means developer trust is often built away from your main campaign assets.
It is built into forums. \n In open-source issues. \n In Discord communities. \n In benchmark discussions. \n In technical comparisons. \n In the release notes. \n In migration guides. \n In long comment threads where people ask sharp questions and get real answers.
If your startup wants developer trust, it has to stop thinking only like a marketer and start behaving like a participant in the ecosystem.
You are not just broadcasting. You are entering a conversation where credibility is constantly tested.
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The best marketing to developers often does not feel like marketing at all.
It feels like education.
It feels like a practical guide that solves a problem.
It feels like a clear tutorial.
It feels like an honest breakdown of why a certain engineering decision was made.
It feels like a transparent post explaining what changed, what broke, and what comes next.
It feels like someone on the team actually understands the work developers do.
This is why content marketing can work so well with technical audiences when done right. Not because content is magical, but because useful information creates trust faster than polished persuasion.
A startup earns more credibility by publishing one genuinely useful technical article than by publishing ten self-congratulatory product announcements.
Developers remember usefulness.
They also remember fluff.
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The hard truth is that developer trust behaves less like growth marketing and more like reputation.
It compounds slowly.
A good launch can create awareness quickly, but trust is usually built through repeated proof. A stable product experience. Good docs. Honest updates. Responsive support. Technical depth. Public consistency. Community presence. Shipping improvements over time.
This process is slower than many startup teams want.
That is exactly why there is pressure to shortcut it.
Some teams try to manufacture trust with inflated social proof. Others borrow authority through vague claims about adoption. Others overload pages with logos, quotes, and language that suggests maturity they have not yet earned.
But developers are unusually good at detecting artificial confidence.
If your product is early, say it is early.
If your documentation is improving, say it is improving.
If your roadmap is still evolving, say that too.
Paradoxically, honest imperfection often builds more trust than polished overstatement. Developers do not expect perfection. They expect truth.
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Many startups ask how to make developers trust them faster.
That is usually the wrong question.
A better question is: what is making developers distrust us right now?
Maybe it is unclear docs. \n Maybe it is inconsistent product behavior. \n Maybe it is a mismatch between promise and experience. \n Maybe it is vague pricing. \n Maybe it is an aggressive sales motion too early in the journey. \n Maybe it is shallow content written for SEO rather than for technical usefulness. \n Maybe it is the absence of real examples.
Trust does not always require a grand brand strategy. Sometimes it requires removing small signals that create doubt.
That work is less glamorous than campaign planning, but it matters more.
Because every unnecessary friction point tells developers something about how your company thinks.
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If your audience is developers, marketing cannot operate as a separate storytelling layer sitting above the product. It has to be tightly connected to product, engineering, developer relations, support, and community.
Why?
Because the marketing promise must survive technical scrutiny.
That only happens when marketers understand the product deeply enough to speak accurately, and when the rest of the company understands that developer trust is not a copywriting problem. It is a full-stack company problem.
Docs are marketing. \n Developer experience is marketing. \n Pricing transparency is marketing. \n API design is marketing. \n Support quality is marketing. \n Public issue handling is marketing. \n Changelog discipline is marketing.
Everything communicates.
And developers read all of it.
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The best way to think about developer marketing is not as a game of persuasion, but as a system of evidence.
Your job is not to convince developers to suspend skepticism.
Your job is to give them enough truth, clarity, access, and proof that skepticism starts to relax on its own.
That means less obsession with clever hooks and more obsession with honest substance.
Less theater. \n More usability.
Less brand inflation. \n More product evidence.
Less funnel trickery. \n More technical credibility.
A developer may come in through marketing, but they stay because your product, documentation, and behavior confirm that the promise was real.
That is why developer trust cannot be growth-hacked.
It can only be earned.
And in the long run, that is better for everyone.
Because when developers trust you, they do not just convert. They adopt, integrate, recommend, and build on top of what you made.
That kind of trust is slower to win.
But it is far more durable than a spike in clicks.
2026-03-27 23:00:41
Hey Hackers!
\ Welcome to HackerNoon Projects of the Week, where we spotlight standout projects from the Proof of Usefulness Hackathon, HackerNoon’s competition designed to measure what actually matters: real utility over hype.
\ This week, we’re excited to share another set of unbelievable projects that have proven their worth and usefulness: Ravasend, polluSensWeb, and Nullmail.
\
:::tip Want to see your own project spotlighted here?
Join the Proof of Usefulness Hackathon to get on our radar.
:::
\ \
Getting paid in crypto is quick and efficient. But unfortunately, most places do not accept crypto as a legitimate form of payment; good luck trying to pay your rent with crypto. Ravasend saw this problem and decided to do something about it. Ravasend allows its users to convert crypto into legitimate, local currency.
\ The type of crypto it accepts includes BTC, ETH, USDT, and more. Your Crypto could then be converted into Nigerian Naira, Ghanaian Cedis, and Kenyan Shillings. And, on Ravasend’s website, it states that there will be more markets coming soon.
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Now’s a good time for Ravasend to exist because legacy banking infrastructure in emerging markets often lags behind the speed of the global crypto economy, creating a critical need for a bridge that ensures funds are available immediately for real-world necessities.
- Emmanuel Isika, Ravasend
\ Proof of Usefulness: +49/1000
\

:::tip See Ravasend’s full Proof of Usefulness Report
Read their story on HackerNoon
:::
\
Air quality is a very important topic when it comes to the future of this planet. The more we care about and pay attention to this serious matter, the more we can do to improve it. That’s why it’s good that polluSensWeb exists. It’s a tool that can read and plot data from UART air quality sensors. According to its website, it makes it easy to organize this data by allowing users to have multiple simultaneous charts, has frame parsing, and allows for a full CSV export.
\ It also supports 35 sensors, ranging from different Plantower and YYS sensors, plus many more. And the best part is that this list is ever-expanding.
\
Now’s a good time for polluSensWeb to exist because it lowers the barrier to entry for citizen science and education by removing the need for complex driver installations and dedicated software just to visualize sensor data.
- Aleksei Tertychnyi, polluSensWeb
\ Proof of Usefulness: +46/1000
\

:::tip See polluSensWeb’s full Proof of Usefulness Report
Read their story on HackerNoon
:::
\
https://hackernoon.com/nullmail-privacy-first-disposable-email-that-actually-works?embedable=true
It’s annoying how, anytime you visit a website or download an app, they immediately want you to sign up and create an account by using your email. This makes your email inbox a wasteland of spam from an array of different companies. But it doesn’t have to be this way. Nullmail is here to save you and your inbox.
\ Nullmail is a privacy tool that allows users to generate a disposable email. No data or personal information required; just go to the website, and an email will be waiting for you immediately.
\ Apart from company spam being annoying, it’s also dangerous for all these companies to have your email address since they all seem to have privacy breaches every month or so. With Nullmail, that can be a problem of the past.
\
It helps users protect their privacy, avoid spam, and quickly verify accounts without exposing their real email address. Built with a minimal, privacy-first architecture, it prioritizes usefulness over growth or data collection.
- Gabor Koos, NullMail
\ Proof of Usefulness: +76/1000
\

\
:::tip See NullMail’s full Proof of Usefulness Report
Read their story on HackerNoon
:::
\ \
It's our answer to a web drowning in vaporware and empty promises. We evaluate projects based on: \n ▪️ Real user adoption \n ▪️ Sustainable revenue \n ▪️ Technical stability \n ▪️ Genuine utility \n \n Projects score from -100 to +1000. Top scorers compete for $20K in cash and $130K+ in software credits.
\ You’ll be in good company. The hackathon is backed by teams who ship production software for a living - Bright Data, Neo4j, Storyblok, Algolia, and HackerNoon.
\
\
1. Get your free Proof of Usefulness score instantly \n 2. Your submission becomes a HackerNoon article (published within days) \n 3. Compete for monthly prizes \n 4. All participants get rewards
Complete guide on how to submit here.
\
:::tip 👉 Submit Your Project Now!
:::
\ That’s all for this week.
Until next time, hackers!
2026-03-27 22:11:53
LOS ANGELES — March 27, 2026 — Today, Novava proudly celebrates the launch of its innovative cryptocurrency exchange designed specifically for dedicated traders.
Unlike traditional platforms that cater to casual users, Novava focuses on traders who navigate market cycles that emphasises speed, stability, and clean execution, even in the most chaotic market conditions.
Novava embodies its core motto "Trade Volatility, Think Clearly, Stay in the Game," through a suite of robust advanced features tailored to the needs of active traders.
Some key functionalities include:
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Amidst its rapid expansion, Novava is set to launch a USDT Card, providing users a new streamline payment solution designed to facilitate seamless transactions.
Backed by a dedicated team of over 50 professionals, including hackers, quants, and active traders, Novava employs high-performance matching infrastructure, rigorous liquidity stress tests, and innovative volatility simulations. This internal team actively protects the platform against potential threats and ensures a resilient user experience.
"Our mission is to empower real traders with the tools they need to succeed through all market conditions," said Kai Voss, the CEO of Novava. "At Novava, we understand trading is more than a click of a button. It's about comprehensive engagement with the market. Our unique platform reflects that commitment."
In addition to its technological edge, Novava has established a strong global presence with over 20 business developers, implementing market-specific engagement and localized growth strategies tailored for each region.
Novava invites traders to experience a new era in cryptocurrency trading, where performance meets reliability and strategy transcends mere speculation.
For more information, visit the website or follow us @Novava_Official on X.
Contact: Novava
Email Address: [email protected]
:::tip This story was published as a press release by Blockmanwire under HackerNoon’s Business Blogging Program
:::
Disclaimer:
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Cryptocurrencies are speculative, complex, and involve high risks. This can mean high prices volatility and potential loss of your initial investment. You should consider your financial situation, investment purposes, and consult with a financial advisor before making any investment decisions. The HackerNoon editorial team has only verified the story for grammatical accuracy and does not endorse or guarantee the accuracy, reliability, or completeness of the information stated in this article. #DYOR
`
2026-03-27 20:22:29
A few months ago, our Founder, Hitesh, was on a call with the CTO of a mid-sized behavioral health platform based out of Austin. They had just finished a promising internal pilot of an AI scheduling agent, the kind that reads unstructured clinical notes, matches patient urgency, and books follow-up appointments without manual intervention. Good results, measurable ROI, and clinical staff were happy.
Then their compliance officer walked into the room.
The question she asked was deceptively simple: "What data did you feed it, and where did it go?"
Nobody had a clean answer. Not because the team was negligent, they were sharp, but because when you move fast with AI in healthcare, the compliance architecture tends to get retrofitted rather than built in. That conversation ended the pilot. Temporarily. And it's a version of a conversation happening in boardrooms across the US healthcare system right now.
This article is for the teams who want to get ahead of that question, not answer it after the fact.
Before getting into data handling, there's a foundational distinction worth establishing clearly because it directly determines your compliance surface.
A chatbot responds. An AI agent acts.
When your system can write back to an EHR, trigger a referral workflow, flag a case for escalation, or auto-populate a prior authorization form, that's agentic AI in healthcare. And that carries a materially broader compliance footprint than a retrieval-augmented Q&A system that simply surfaces information.
The Office for Civil Rights at HHS hasn't issued AI-specific HIPAA guidance as of 2026, but the existing framework applies fully regardless. Any autonomous system that creates, receives, maintains, or transmits Protected Health Information (PHI) is a covered function. If you're a healthcare app development company building these systems for health networks, you are operating as a Business Associate the moment PHI enters your pipeline, regardless of whether you call the system an "agent," a "copilot," or an "automation tool."
The label doesn't change the liability.
Most teams treat the Business Associate Agreement like terms-of-service fine print. That's a mistake that surfaces painfully during audits.
Under HIPAA's Privacy and Security Rules, a covered entity cannot share PHI with any vendor, including an AI vendor, without a signed BAA that specifies exactly how that data will be used, protected, and whether it will be used for model training. That last clause is where enterprise AI contracts get contentious in 2026, and for good reason.
The question your legal and engineering teams should be asking every AI vendor, explicitly: does our patient data get folded into your global foundation model? If the answer is ambiguous, that's your answer. A properly structured BAA explicitly prohibits using client PHI for upstream model improvement unless separately consented. Zero-Data Retention Architecture, where the model processes data entirely in memory and retains nothing post-session, is becoming the expected standard for healthcare deployments. Not a premium feature but a baseline expectation.
We've seen healthcare mobile app development companies skip this conversation in early vendor selection because the AI vendor's product looked compelling. That decision almost always resurfaces as a compliance remediation project six to twelve months later – expensive, disruptive, and entirely avoidable.
This is where most implementation guides go abstract. Here's a specific, practical breakdown of how to categorize the data your AI agent will touch and how to handle each category.
The Minimum Necessary Standard under HIPAA (45 CFR §164.502(b)) requires that you share only the amount of PHI genuinely required for the task at hand. For AI systems, your data pipeline design is itself a compliance decision.
| Data Category | Examples | Risk Level | Recommended Handling | |----|----|----|----| | De-identified demographics | Age range, region, general diagnosis codes | Low | Safe for model context after Safe Harbor de-ID | | Structured clinical data | ICD-10 codes, lab result ranges, and medication classes | Medium | Acceptable with BAA + access logging | | Unstructured clinical notes | Free-text physician notes, therapy session summaries | High | Requires de-identification or strict access controls to avoid for training | | Direct identifiers | Full name, SSN, MRN, DOB, device IDs, IP addresses | Critical | Never in AI pipelines without an explicit BAA scope and full audit trail |
De-identification under HIPAA's Safe Harbor method requires removal of all 18 enumerated identifiers – names, geographic data below state level, dates more specific than year for patients over 89, phone numbers, email addresses, Social Security numbers, medical record numbers, health plan numbers, account numbers, license numbers, vehicle identifiers, device identifiers, URLs, IP addresses, biometric identifiers, full-face photos, and any other unique identifier. If even one of those 18 remains, the data is still PHI under law, regardless of how it's labeled internally.
The Expert Determination method offers an alternative: a qualified statistician certifies that re-identification risk is statistically very small, but Safe Harbor remains the cleaner, more auditable path for AI training data in practice.
Most agentic AI in healthcare workflows need to read from and write to EHR systems: Epic, Cerner, athenahealth. The data exchange layer at this interface is one of the most underappreciated compliance pressure points in the current generation of healthcare AI.
The current standard is FHIR R4 (Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources), maintained by HL7. FHIR-compliant APIs structure clinical data into discrete, queryable resources: Patient, Observation, Condition, MedicationRequest, which makes it significantly easier to apply data minimization at the API level. Instead of pulling an entire patient record, a well-architected agent queries only the specific FHIR resource the task actually requires.
This isn't just good engineering. It's a defensible compliance posture. When your audit logs show that the agent requested blood pressure readings only, rather than a full chart pull, you have evidence of purposeful data minimization, which regulators and privacy auditors treat as meaningful.
Under the ONC's 21st Century Cures Act final rule, certified EHR systems are now required to support FHIR-based APIs for patient data access. That regulatory pressure creates a consistent interface layer your AI pipeline can rely on and should use as a built-in scope limiter from day one.
In agentic architectures, Human-in-the-Loop (HITL) refers to designed checkpoints where a human must review and approve an action before the agent proceeds. In healthcare, these aren't optional review screens added to make users feel comfortable. They are clinical risk controls, and they need to be mapped to consequence severity before architecture decisions are made, not bolted on during QA.
Consider an agent that reads a flagged patient chart, determines the case meets criteria for urgent escalation, and is designed to notify the on-call provider. Reasonable workflow. Now consider what happens if the agent hallucinates a diagnosis code, acts on a stale record, or misreads a medication entry.
The tiered model we apply at Tech Exactly across our healthcare app development services:
This tiered approach aligns directly with the NIST AI Risk Management Framework (AI RMF 1.0), which specifically addresses autonomous action thresholds in high-stakes domains. Building HITL checkpoints into your architecture from the start isn't just risk management. Clinical users consistently report higher trust in systems that keep them visibly in control.
If you're evaluating a healthcare app development company in USA or an AI vendor, SOC 2 Type II for Healthcare attestation is the floor, not a differentiator. It tells you that a third-party auditor verified the vendor's security controls over time, typically a six to twelve-month period.
For healthcare AI specifically, look beyond the report's generic controls and ask about sub-processors directly. Who hosts the model? Who processes inference requests? Do those sub-processors have their own BAAs and independent SOC 2 reports? A vendor with a clean SOC 2 can still expose PHI through a non-compliant inference API sitting underneath their product (we've seen it happen).
AI Governance Frameworks are a relatively new addition to vendor evaluation checklists, but in 2026, they belong there. What to look for: documented model versioning, bias monitoring protocols, data provenance tracking, and clear delineation of which model layer is fine-tuned on client data versus shared foundation model weights. These aren't theoretical; they're the questions your CISO and compliance officer will ask, and your vendor needs auditable answers.
If your platform serves any users in the European Union, even as a secondary market GDPR for medical AI introduces requirements that run parallel to, and sometimes conflict with, HIPAA. Health data is classified as a "special category" under GDPR Article 9, requiring explicit consent as the lawful basis for processing in most cases. HIPAA operates on a different consent model — it defines permitted uses rather than requiring explicit consent for each interaction.
The operational implication for AI pipelines: if you are training or fine-tuning models on data that includes any EU-origin health records, your legal basis analysis needs to happen before data ingestion, not during an audit. The two frameworks can coexist, but they require deliberate, explicit mapping across your entire data pipeline before a model touches that data.
When our team at Tech Exactly scopes a HIPAA-compliant AI agent build, this is the sequence we follow in this order, without shortcuts:
Ambient Clinical Intelligence is where AI systems that passively listen to clinical encounters and generate structured documentation in real time, representing the most complex HIPAA-compliant AI agents surface area in the current generation of healthcare technology. It combines audio capture, real-time transcription, unstructured-to-structured data conversion, and EHR write-back into a single, continuous workflow. Every step in that chain is a PHI touchpoint.
The teams getting this right in 2026 are not the ones with the most sophisticated models. They're the ones like the Austin CTO after that hallway conversation, who treated compliance architecture as a product requirement from day one. Their six-week architecture review produced a tighter data scope, faster inference, a reduced vendor risk profile, and clinical users who trusted the system enough to actually use it.
Compliance, when it's built in early, tends to work out that way.
When evaluating healthcare app development services for agentic AI work, prioritize partners who treat compliance architecture as a product requirement. Ask for their data categorization framework, their BAA coverage process, and their HITL design approach before the first line of code is written.
What makes an AI agent HIPAA-compliant in healthcare?
A HIPAA-compliant AI agent must operate under a signed BAA with every vendor in the inference chain, apply the Minimum Necessary Standard to all data inputs, implement Zero-Data Retention Architecture for PHI processing, and maintain a full audit trail of every data access and agent action. Compliance is an architecture decision, not a policy document.
What is the difference between a healthcare chatbot and an agentic AI system?
A chatbot retrieves and surfaces information. An agentic AI in healthcare system executes actions writing to EHRs, triggering workflows, and modifying clinical records. That distinction changes the compliance surface, the HITL requirements, and the risk profile entirely. If your system can act, it needs to be scoped, documented, and governed as an agent.
Which de-identification method should we use for AI training data?
For most healthcare app development companies, Safe Harbor de-identification is the recommended path. It's explicit, auditable, and removes all 18 HIPAA-enumerated identifiers. Expert Determination offers more flexibility but requires a qualified statistician and produces less auditable documentation. When in doubt, Safe Harbor is the defensible choice.
What should we look for beyond SOC 2 Type II when evaluating an AI vendor?
Ask about sub-processor BAA coverage, model versioning documentation, data provenance tracking, bias monitoring protocols, and whether client PHI is ever used for upstream model training. SOC 2 Type II confirms security controls exist, it doesn't tell you how your patient data flows through the vendor's full inference stack.
\
:::tip This story was distributed as a release by Sanya Kapoor under HackerNoon’s Business Blogging Program.
:::
\
2026-03-27 19:30:13
:::info Astounding Stories of Super-Science October 2022, by Astounding Stories is part of HackerNoon’s Book Blog Post series. You can jump to any chapter in this book here. THE MURDER OF ROGER ACKROYD - PARKER
\
\ By Agatha Christie
:::
\ It occurred to me the next morning that under the exhilaration produced by Tin-ho, or the Perfect Winning, I might have been slightly indiscreet. True, Poirot had not asked me to keep the discovery of the ring to myself. On the other hand, he had said nothing about it whilst at Fernly, and as far as I knew, I was the only person aware that it had been found. I felt distinctly guilty. The fact was by now spreading through King’s Abbot like wildfire. I was expecting wholesale reproaches from Poirot any minute.
The joint funeral of Mrs. Ferrars and Roger Ackroyd was fixed for eleven o’clock. It was a melancholy and impressive ceremony. All the party from Fernly were there.
After it was over, Poirot, who had also been present, took me by the arm, and invited me to accompany him back to The Larches. He was looking very grave, and I feared that my indiscretion of the night before had got round to his ears. But it soon transpired that his thoughts were occupied by something of a totally different nature.
“See you,” he said. “We must act. With your help I propose to examine a witness. We will question him, we203 will put such fear into him that the truth is bound to come out.”
“What witness are you talking of?” I asked, very much surprised.
“Parker!” said Poirot. “I asked him to be at my house this morning at twelve o’clock. He should await us there at this very minute.”
“What do you think,” I ventured, glancing sideways at his face.
“I know this—that I am not satisfied.”
“You think that it was he who blackmailed Mrs. Ferrars?”
“Either that, or——”
“Well?” I said, after waiting a minute or two.
“My friend, I will say this to you—I hope it was he.”
The gravity of his manner, and something indefinable that tinged it, reduced me to silence.
On arrival at The Larches, we were informed that Parker was already there awaiting our return. As we entered the room, the butler rose respectfully.
“Good morning, Parker,” said Poirot pleasantly. “One instant, I pray of you.”
He removed his overcoat and gloves.
“Allow me, sir,” said Parker, and sprang forward to assist him. He deposited the articles neatly on a chair by the door. Poirot watched him with approval.
“Thank you, my good Parker,” he said. “Take a seat, will you not? What I have to say may take some time.”
Parker seated himself with an apologetic bend of the head.
“Now what do you think I asked you to come here for this morning—eh?”
Parker coughed.
“I understood, sir, that you wished to ask me a few questions about my late master—private like.”
“Précisément,” said Poirot, beaming. “Have you made many experiments in blackmail?”
“Sir!”
The butler sprang to his feet.
“Do not excite yourself,” said Poirot placidly. “Do not play the farce of the honest, injured man. You know all there is to know about the blackmail, is it not so?”
“Sir, I—I’ve never—never been——”
“Insulted,” suggested Poirot, “in such a way before. Then why, my excellent Parker, were you so anxious to overhear the conversation in Mr. Ackroyd’s study the other evening, after you had caught the word blackmail?”
“I wasn’t—I——”
“Who was your last master?” rapped out Poirot suddenly.
“My last master?”
“Yes, the master you were with before you came to Mr. Ackroyd.”
“A Major Ellerby, sir——”
Poirot took the words out of his mouth.
“Just so, Major Ellerby. Major Ellerby was addicted to drugs, was he not? You traveled about with him. When he was in Bermuda there was some trouble—a man was killed. Major Ellerby was partly responsible. It was hushed up. But you knew about it. How much did Major Ellerby pay you to keep your mouth shut?”
Parker was staring at him open-mouthed. The man had gone to pieces, his cheeks shook flabbily.
“You see, me, I have made inquiries,” said Poirot pleasantly. “It is as I say. You got a good sum then as blackmail, and Major Ellerby went on paying you until he died. Now I want to hear about your latest experiment.”
Parker still stared.
“It is useless to deny. Hercule Poirot knows. It is so, what I have said about Major Ellerby, is it not?”
As though against his will, Parker nodded reluctantly once. His face was ashen pale.
“But I never hurt a hair of Mr. Ackroyd’s head,” he moaned. “Honest to God, sir, I didn’t. I’ve been afraid of this coming all the time. And I tell you I didn’t—I didn’t kill him.”
His voice rose almost to a scream.
“I am inclined to believe you, my friend,” said Poirot. “You have not the nerve—the courage. But I must have the truth.”
“I’ll tell you anything, sir, anything you want to know. It’s true that I tried to listen that night. A word or two I heard made me curious. And Mr. Ackroyd’s wanting not to be disturbed, and shutting himself up with the doctor the way he did. It’s God’s own truth what I told the police. I heard the word blackmail, sir, and well——”
He paused.
“You thought there might be something in it for you?” suggested Poirot smoothly.
“Well—well, yes, I did, sir. I thought that if Mr. Ackroyd was being blackmailed, why shouldn’t I have a share of the pickings?”
A very curious expression passed over Poirot’s face. He leaned forward.
“Had you any reason to suppose before that night that Mr. Ackroyd was being blackmailed?”
“No, indeed, sir. It was a great surprise to me. Such a regular gentleman in all his habits.”
“How much did you overhear?”
“Not very much, sir. There seemed what I might call a spite against me. Of course I had to attend to my duties in the pantry. And when I did creep along once or twice to the study it was no use. The first time Dr. Sheppard came out and almost caught me in the act, and another time Mr. Raymond passed me in the big hall and went that way, so I knew it was no use; and when I went with the tray, Miss Flora headed me off.”
Poirot stared for a long time at the man, as if to test his sincerity. Parker returned his gaze earnestly.
“I hope you believe me, sir. I’ve been afraid all along the police would rake up that old business with Major Ellerby and be suspicious of me in consequence.”
“Eh bien,” said Poirot at last. “I am disposed to believe you. But there is one thing I must request of you—to show me your bank-book. You have a bank-book, I presume?”
“Yes, sir, as a matter of fact, I have it with me now.”
With no sign of confusion, he produced it from his pocket. Poirot took the slim, green-covered book and perused the entries.
“Ah! I perceive you have purchased £500 of National Savings Certificates this year?”
“Yes, sir. I have already over a thousand pounds saved—the result of my connection with—er—my late master, Major Ellerby. And I have had quite a little flutter on some horses this year—very successful. If you remember, sir, a rank outsider won the Jubilee. I was fortunate enough to back it—£20.”
Poirot handed him back the book.
“I will wish you good-morning. I believe that you have told me the truth. If you have not—so much the worse for you, my friend.”
When Parker had departed, Poirot picked up his overcoat once more.
“Going out again?” I asked.
“Yes, we will pay a little visit to the good M. Hammond.”
“You believe Parker’s story?”
“It is credible enough on the face of it. It seems clear that—unless he is a very good actor indeed—he genuinely believes it was Ackroyd himself who was the victim of blackmail. If so, he knows nothing at all about the Mrs. Ferrars business.”
“Then in that case—who——”
“Précisément! Who? But our visit to M. Hammond will accomplish one purpose. It will either clear Parker completely or else——”
“Well?”
“I fall into the bad habit of leaving my sentences unfinished this morning,” said Poirot apologetically. “You must bear with me.”
“By the way,” I said, rather sheepishly, “I’ve got a confession to make. I’m afraid I have inadvertently let out something about that ring.”
“What ring?”
“The ring you found in the goldfish pond.”
“Ah! yes,” said Poirot, smiling broadly.
“I hope you’re not annoyed? It was very careless of me.”
“But not at all, my good friend, not at all. I laid no commands upon you. You were at liberty to speak of it if you so wished. She was interested, your sister?”
“She was indeed. It created a sensation. All sorts of theories are flying about.”
“Ah! And yet it is so simple. The true explanation leapt to the eye, did it not?”
“Did it?” I said dryly.
Poirot laughed.
“The wise man does not commit himself,” he observed. “Is not that so? But here we are at Mr. Hammond’s.”
The lawyer was in his office, and we were ushered in without any delay. He rose and greeted us in his dry, precise manner.
Poirot came at once to the point.
“Monsieur, I desire from you certain information, that is, if you will be so good as to give it to me. You acted, I understand, for the late Mrs. Ferrars of King’s Paddock?”
I noticed the swift gleam of surprise which showed in the lawyer’s eyes, before his professional reserve came down once more like a mask over his face.
“Certainly. All her affairs passed through our hands.”
“Very good. Now, before I ask you to tell me anything, I should like you to listen to the story Dr. Sheppard will relate to you. You have no objection, have you, my friend, to repeating the conversation you had with Mr. Ackroyd last Friday night?”
“Not in the least,” I said, and straightway began the recital of that strange evening.
Hammond listened with close attention.
“That is all,” I said, when I had finished.
“Blackmail,” said the lawyer thoughtfully.
“You are surprised?” asked Poirot.
The lawyer took off his pince-nez and polished them with his handkerchief.
“No,” he replied, “I can hardly say that I am surprised. I have suspected something of the kind for some time.”
“That brings us,” said Poirot, “to the information for which I am asking. If any one can give us an idea of the actual sums paid, you are the man, monsieur.”
“I see no object in withholding the information,” said Hammond, after a moment or two. “During the past year, Mrs. Ferrars has sold out certain securities, and the money for them was paid into her account and not reinvested. As her income was a large one, and she lived very quietly after her husband’s death, it seems certain that these sums of money were paid away for some special purpose. I once sounded her on the subject, and she said that she was obliged to support several of her husband’s poor relations. I let the matter drop, of course. Until now, I have always imagined that the money was paid to some woman who had had a claim on Ashley Ferrars. I never dreamed that Mrs. Ferrars herself was involved.”
“And the amount?” asked Poirot.
“In all, I should say the various sums totaled at least twenty thousand pounds.”
“Twenty thousand pounds!” I exclaimed. “In one year!”
“Mrs. Ferrars was a very wealthy woman,” said Poirot dryly. “And the penalty for murder is not a pleasant one.”
“Is there anything else that I can tell you?” inquired Mr. Hammond.
“I thank you, no,” said Poirot, rising. “All my excuses for having deranged you.”
“Not at all, not at all.”
“The word derange,” I remarked, when we were outside again, “is applicable to mental disorder only.”
“Ah!” cried Poirot, “never will my English be quite perfect. A curious language. I should then have said disarranged, n’est-ce pas?”
“Disturbed is the word you had in mind.”
“I thank you, my friend. The word exact, you are zealous for it. Eh bien, what about our friend Parker now? With twenty thousand pounds in hand, would he have continued being a butler? Je ne pense pas. It is, of course, possible that he banked the money under another name, but I am disposed to believe he spoke the truth to us. If he is a scoundrel, he is a scoundrel on a mean scale. He has not the big ideas. That leaves us as a possibility, Raymond, or—well—Major Blunt.”
“Surely not Raymond,” I objected. “Since we know that he was desperately hard up for a matter of five hundred pounds.”
“That is what he says, yes.”
“And as to Hector Blunt——”
“I will tell you something as to the good Major Blunt,” interrupted Poirot. “It is my business to make inquiries. I make them. Eh bien—that legacy of which he speaks, I have discovered that the amount of it was close upon twenty thousand pounds. What do you think of that?”
I was so taken aback that I could hardly speak.
“It’s impossible,” I said at last. “A well-known man like Hector Blunt.”
Poirot shrugged his shoulders.
“Who knows? At least he is a man with big ideas. I confess that I hardly see him as a blackmailer, but there is another possibility that you have not even considered.”
“What is that?”
“The fire, my friend. Ackroyd himself may have destroyed that letter, blue envelope and all, after you left him.”
“I hardly think that likely,” I said slowly. “And yet—of course, it may be so. He might have changed his mind.”
We had just arrived at my house, and on the spur of the moment I invited Poirot to come in and take pot luck.
I thought Caroline would be pleased with me, but it is hard to satisfy one’s women folk. It appears that we were eating chops for lunch—the kitchen staff being regaled on tripe and onions. And two chops set before three people are productive of embarrassment.
But Caroline is seldom daunted for long. With magnificent mendacity, she explained to Poirot that although James laughed at her for doing so, she adhered strictly to a vegetarian diet. She descanted ecstatically on the delights of nut cutlets (which I am quite sure she has never tasted) and ate a Welsh rarebit with gusto and frequent cutting remarks as to the dangers of “flesh” foods.
Afterwards, when we were sitting in front of the fire and smoking, Caroline attacked Poirot directly.
“Not found Ralph Paton yet?” she asked.
“Where should I find him, mademoiselle?”
“I thought, perhaps, you’d found him in Cranchester,” said Caroline, with intense meaning in her tone.
Poirot looked merely bewildered.
“In Cranchester? But why in Cranchester?”
I enlightened him with a touch of malice.
“One of our ample staff of private detectives happened to see you in a car on the Cranchester road yesterday,” I explained.
Poirot’s bewilderment vanished. He laughed heartily.
“Ah, that! A simple visit to the dentist, c’est tout. My tooth, it aches. I go there. My tooth, it is at once better. I think to return quickly. The dentist, he says No. Better to have it out. I argue. He insists. He has his way! That particular tooth, it will never ache again.”
Caroline collapsed rather like a pricked balloon.
We fell to discussing Ralph Paton.
“A weak nature,” I insisted. “But not a vicious one.”
“Ah!” said Poirot. “But weakness, where does it end?”
“Exactly,” said Caroline. “Take James here—weak as water, if I weren’t about to look after him.”
“My dear Caroline,” I said irritably, “can’t you talk without dragging in personalities?”
“You are weak, James,” said Caroline, quite unmoved. “I’m eight years older than you are—oh! I don’t mind M. Poirot knowing that——”
“I should never have guessed it, mademoiselle,” said Poirot, with a gallant little bow.
“Eight years older. But I’ve always considered it my duty to look after you. With a bad bringing up, Heaven knows what mischief you might have got into by now.”
“I might have married a beautiful adventuress,” I murmured, gazing at the ceiling, and blowing smoke rings.
“Adventuress!” said Caroline, with a snort. “If we’re talking of adventuresses——”
She left the sentence unfinished.
“Well?” I said, with some curiosity.
“Nothing. But I can think of some one not a hundred miles away.”
Then she turned to Poirot suddenly.
“James sticks to it that you believe some one in the house committed the murder. All I can say is, you’re wrong.”
“I should not like to be wrong,” said Poirot. “It is not—how do you say—my métier?”
“I’ve got the facts pretty clearly,” continued Caroline, taking no notice of Poirot’s remark, “from James and others. As far as I can see, of the people in the house, only two could have had the chance of doing it. Ralph Paton and Flora Ackroyd.”
“My dear Caroline——”
“Now, James, don’t interrupt me. I know what I’m talking about. Parker met her outside the door, didn’t he? He didn’t hear her uncle saying good-night to her. She could have killed him then and there.”
“Caroline.”
“I’m not saying she did, James. I’m saying she could have done. As a matter of fact, though Flora is like all these young girls nowadays, with no veneration for their betters and thinking they know best on every subject under the sun, I don’t for a minute believe she’d kill even a chicken. But there it is. Mr. Raymond and Major Blunt have alibis. Mrs. Ackroyd’s got an alibi. Even that Russell woman seems to have one—and a good job for her it is she has. Who is left? Only Ralph and215 Flora! And say what you will, I don’t believe Ralph Paton is a murderer. A boy we’ve known all our lives.”
Poirot was silent for a minute, watching the curling smoke rise from his cigarette. When at last he spoke, it was in a gentle far-away voice that produced a curious impression. It was totally unlike his usual manner.
“Let us take a man—a very ordinary man. A man with no idea of murder in his heart. There is in him somewhere a strain of weakness—deep down. It has so far never been called into play. Perhaps it never will be—and if so he will go to his grave honored and respected by every one. But let us suppose that something occurs. He is in difficulties—or perhaps not that even. He may stumble by accident on a secret—a secret involving life or death to some one. And his first impulse will be to speak out—to do his duty as an honest citizen. And then the strain of weakness tells. Here is a chance of money—a great amount of money. He wants money—he desires it—and it is so easy. He has to do nothing for it—just keep silence. That is the beginning. The desire for money grows. He must have more—and more! He is intoxicated by the gold mine which has opened at his feet. He becomes greedy. And in his greed he overreaches himself. One can press a man as far as one likes—but with a woman one must not press too far. For a woman has at heart a great desire to speak the truth. How many husbands who have deceived their wives go comfortably to their graves, carrying their secret with them! How many wives who have deceived their216 husbands wreck their lives by throwing the fact in those same husbands’ teeth! They have been pressed too far. In a reckless moment (which they will afterwards regret, bien entendu) they fling safety to the winds and turn at bay, proclaiming the truth with great momentary satisfaction to themselves. So it was, I think, in this case. The strain was too great. And so there came your proverb, the death of the goose that laid the golden eggs. But that is not the end. Exposure faced the man of whom we are speaking. And he is not the same man he was—say, a year ago. His moral fiber is blunted. He is desperate. He is fighting a losing battle, and he is prepared to take any means that come to his hand, for exposure means ruin to him. And so—the dagger strikes!”
He was silent for a moment. It was as though he had laid a spell upon the room. I cannot try to describe the impression his words produced. There was something in the merciless analysis, and the ruthless power of vision which struck fear into both of us.
“Afterwards,” he went on softly, “the danger removed, he will be himself again, normal, kindly. But if the need again arises, then once more he will strike.”
Caroline roused herself at last.
“You are speaking of Ralph Paton,” she said. “You may be right, you may not, but you have no business to condemn a man unheard.”
The telephone bell rang sharply. I went out into the hall, and took off the receiver.
“What?” I said. “Yes. Dr. Sheppard speaking.”
I listened for a minute or two, then replied briefly. Replacing the receiver, I went back into the drawing-room.
“Poirot,” I said, “they have detained a man at Liverpool. His name is Charles Kent, and he is believed to be the stranger who visited Fernly that night. They want me to go to Liverpool at once and identify him.”
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