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Businessman accuses Ukraine of Monaco bombing; FIFA looking into Malvinas banner; 'Earth-like' planet detected
64 Articles •
Atmosphere On 'Earth-Like' Planet Detected for First Time
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The discovery: Astronomers detected helium escaping from LHS 1140 b, a rocky super-Earth 48 light-years away, marking the first confirmed atmosphere on a rocky planet in a habitable zone. The team used the WINERED spectrograph at Chile's Magellan telescope in 2024, though the signal vanished when observed again in 2025.
Why it matters: This breakthrough suggests rocky planets can retain atmospheres despite hostile red dwarf environments, dramatically improving prospects for finding habitable worlds and life beyond Earth. The planet's 3-billion-year-old atmosphere makes it a prime target for upcoming JWST observations searching for water vapor and other biosignatures.
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95% of sources are Original Reporting
140 Articles •
Xi: Any One Country Should Not Dominate AI
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What happened: President Xi Jinping told the World Artificial Intelligence Conference in Shanghai today that no single country should dominate AI, launching a 29-nation cooperation organization headquartered in Shanghai. China pledged 5,000 AI training opportunities for developing countries over five years and access to Chinese meteorological AI systems for 30 nations.
Why it matters: This marks China's bid to reshape global AI governance by offering developing nations cheaper alternatives to US technology and setting competing technical standards. The move intensifies US-China tech rivalry as both powers vie to write the rulebook for AI development, potentially affecting which systems, safety standards, and supply chains countries worldwide adopt.
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66% of sources are Original Reporting
50 Articles •
Kenyan Court Rejects Rastafari Cannabis Bid
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What happened: Kenya's High Court dismissed a petition by the Rastafari Society of Kenya seeking a religious exemption to use cannabis in worship, ruling Wednesday that evidence the drug is essential to their faith was inconsistent. The court upheld the constitutionality of the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, which carries penalties of up to 10 years imprisonment and $2,000 fines for possession.
Why it matters: The ruling maintains criminal penalties for cannabis possession, affecting Rastafarians' ability to practice their faith without arrest, but Justice Mwamuye called for a national debate on drug policy, noting cannabis use has become widespread and questioning whether limited law enforcement resources should target small possession cases. The petitioners plan to appeal the decision.
420 Articles •
FIFA 'Assessing Reports' Over Argentina's Falklands Banner
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What happened: Two days ago in Atlanta Argentina beat England 2-1; several players held a banner reading 'Las Malvinas son Argentinas' and FIFA is assessing match reports.
Why it matters: The banner risks fines or player suspensions under FIFA rules; it has reignited UK–Argentina diplomatic tensions and echoes Argentina's 2014 £20,000 fine.
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81% of sources are Original Reporting
40 Articles •
Ukrainian Businessman Accuses Military Intelligence of Monaco Bombing
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What happened: On June 29, a backpack bomb detonated outside Vadym Yermolaiev's Monaco apartment, injuring him, his partner, and their 13-year-old son; his partner lost both legs. Suspect Anastasiia Berezovska fled to Ukraine on July 1 and was found dead on July 6, with two men tied to Ukrainian intelligence arrested for her killing.
Why it matters: Yermolaiev publicly accuses serving officers of Ukraine's military intelligence (HUR) of orchestrating the attack, claiming the operation involved personnel close to leadership. If confirmed, intelligence services conducting assassinations on European soil would threaten international security, public trust in state institutions, and Ukraine's reputation amid ongoing diplomatic cooperation.
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93% of sources are Original Reporting
51 Articles •
Nicaragua Severs Diplomatic Ties With Italy Over 1978 Murder Case
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What happened: Nicaragua cut diplomatic relations with Italy yesterday after Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani demanded the extradition of Alessio Casimirri, a 74-year-old former Red Brigades militant convicted of kidnapping and murdering former Prime Minister Aldo Moro in 1978. Casimirri, who received six life sentences, fled to Nicaragua in 1983, obtained citizenship, and has been sheltered there for over four decades despite repeated Italian extradition requests.
Why it matters: The diplomatic rupture leaves bilateral cooperation between Rome and Managua uncertain and signals escalating tensions over justice for terrorism victims. Italy has vowed to continue pressing for Casimirri's extradition despite Nicaragua's constitutional protections for its nationals, while the dispute unfolds against a backdrop of US and EU sanctions on Nicaragua and broader concerns about political repression.
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73% of sources are Original Reporting
131 Articles •
Japan Revises Imperial Succession Law, Male-Only Rule Stays
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What happened: Japan's parliament passed historic revisions to the Imperial House Law on Friday, allowing adoption of distant male relatives over 15 and letting princesses retain royal status after marriage, but explicitly maintaining the ban on female emperors. The changes aim to address the shrinking 16-member imperial family, which has only three viable male heirs: Crown Prince Fumihito (60), Prince Hisahito (19), and Prince Hitachi (90).
Why it matters: Despite polls showing 70-83% of Japanese support allowing female emperors, the law excludes popular Princess Aiko (24) from succession and instead adopts distant male relatives at least 36 generations removed from Emperor Naruhito. Critics warn this approach could destabilize the 2,600-year-old monarchy long-term, as the succession now depends entirely on 19-year-old Prince Hisahito producing a male heir.
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60% of sources are Original Reporting
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63% of sources are High Factuality
109 Articles •
Moonshot AI Releases World's Largest Open-Source System
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What happened: Beijing-based Moonshot AI today released Kimi K3, a 2.8 trillion-parameter open-weight AI model with a 1-million-token context window, claiming it approaches performance of leading U.S. models from Anthropic and OpenAI. The company plans to publish full model weights by July 27, making it the world's largest open-weight system available for download and customization.
Why it matters: Kimi K3 narrows the gap between Chinese and U.S. AI ecosystems, potentially pressuring American companies to lower prices as Chinese models gain traction among Western startups seeking cheaper alternatives. The release comes amid heightened U.S.-China AI competition and just weeks after Washington delayed public releases of Anthropic and OpenAI's top models over security concerns.
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90% of sources are Original Reporting
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