Daily Briefing
ALMA images reveal Milky Way core; Japan set to deploy missiles near Taiwan; ancient carvings rival early human language

13 Articles •
Hacker Used Anthropic's Claude AI to Breach Mexican Government, Researchers Say
Left 100%
What happened: Mexico's Ministry of Anticorruption launched investigations into alleged data breaches at 20 public institutions, examining whether personal databases were compromised through external hacking on the deep web or internal credential misuse. The ministry announced the probes on Dec. 31 following a surge in cyberattacks, including a September breach affecting nearly 20 million IMSS pensioners.
Why it matters: AI-driven attacks now execute intrusions in hours instead of weeks, while insiders account for roughly 70% of government breaches in Mexico. With 80.7% of Mexican agencies compromised last year and breach costs averaging $4.16 million in Latin America, your personal data held by federal institutions faces unprecedented risk heading into 2026.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
85% of sources are Original Reporting

31 Articles •
Largest-Ever ALMA Image Reveals Milky Way's Hidden Core
Left 32%
Center 68%
What happened: ALMA released the largest and most detailed image ever captured of the Milky Way's Central Molecular Zone, a 650-light-year-wide region surrounding supermassive black hole Sagittarius A*. The survey detected dozens of molecules in the cold gas clouds where massive stars form under extreme conditions.
Why it matters: This breakthrough reveals how stars are born, live, and die near our galaxy's center in conditions impossible to study elsewhere, helping scientists understand galactic evolution. The region hosts the most massive stars in our galaxy, many ending in powerful supernovae that shape the cosmos.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
71% of sources are High Factuality

44 Articles •
Japan to Deploy Missiles on Island Near Taiwan by 2031
Left 32%
Center 29%
Right 39%
The details: Japan will deploy Type-03 medium-range surface-to-air missiles on Yonaguni island by March 2031, with an electronic-warfare unit arriving in fiscal 2026. The missiles, with 50km range and 360-degree tracking capability, will be stationed just 110km from Taiwan alongside roughly 100 personnel at the existing military base.
Why it matters: This deployment strengthens Japan's air defenses amid rising China-Taiwan tensions but risks escalating regional conflict that could draw in the US and allies. China has already retaliated with export curbs on Japanese firms, tourism restrictions, and naval activities, threatening Japan's economy and regional stability.
91% of sources are Original Reporting

84 Articles •
CIA Launches Public Recruitment Drive Inside Iran
L 22%
Center 57%
R 21%
What happened: The CIA published Farsi-language guidance on Tuesday across X, Instagram, and YouTube, instructing Iranians on how to securely contact the agency using Tor, VPNs, and disposable devices. The video has accumulated tens of millions of views and comes as nationwide university protests continue in Iran and U.S.-Iran nuclear talks resume in Geneva this week.
Why it matters: This rare public intelligence recruitment reflects escalating U.S.-Iran tensions as Trump has assembled the largest U.S. military presence in the Middle East in decades and threatened strikes over Iran's nuclear program. The outreach could yield critical intelligence but also poses serious risks to Iranian activists and informants who respond, potentially affecting both diplomatic negotiations and protester safety.
68% of sources are High Factuality

42 Articles •
Study: 40,000-Year-Old Carvings Approach Complexity of Earliest Writing
Left 29%
Center 46%
Right 25%
The discovery: Researchers analyzed over 3,000 geometric signs on 260 Ice Age objects from southwestern Germany dated 43,000 to 34,000 years ago, finding repeated sequences of dots, lines, crosses and notches with statistical complexity comparable to Mesopotamian proto-cuneiform from 3500 BCE. The computational analysis shows these Aurignacian culture marks were intentionally applied in patterns suggesting an information-encoding system, potentially pushing back proto-writing origins by more than 30,000 years.
Why it matters: This finding reveals that Stone Age humans 40,000 years ago possessed cognitive abilities and symbolic thinking comparable to modern humans, using systematic conventions passed down over 10,000 years. The marks were applied selectively—crosses only on animals and tools, dots never on tools—and some sequences appear in rows of 12-13, possibly tracking calendric or seasonal information relevant to hunter-gatherer survival.
88% of sources are Original Reporting
62% of sources are High Factuality

7 Articles •
Study Maps Quantum Effect That Could Enable Battery-Free Devices
Center 100%
The discovery: Scientists at QUT and Nanyang Technological University mapped how the nonlinear Hall effect in bismuth telluride converts alternating signals directly into direct current without diodes, remaining stable up to room temperature. The team showed tiny imperfections control the effect at low temperatures while crystal vibrations take over as it warms, causing voltage direction to flip.
What it means: This quantum effect could power self-powered sensors, wearable technology and battery-free chips that draw energy from wireless signals or their surroundings. The discovery enables smaller, faster and more efficient devices for next-generation wireless networks by eliminating the need for batteries and bulky power conversion components.
71% of sources are Original Reporting

14 Articles •
Citizen Scientists Find World's Largest Coral Colony on Great Barrier Reef
L 22%
Center 78%
The discovery: A mother-and-daughter team of citizen scientists found a J-shaped Pavona clavus coral colony spanning 111 meters and covering 3,973 square meters on the Great Barrier Reef late last year. Sophie Kalkowski-Pope and Jan Pope documented the formation using underwater measurements and high-resolution imagery to create a 3D model, making it the largest thoroughly documented coral colony in the world.
Why it matters: The discovery helps scientists identify crucial sources of reef recovery and better target protection efforts amid ongoing climate threats, as the Great Barrier Reef suffered its sixth mass bleaching event since 2016 in 2025. The 3D model allows researchers to monitor changes over time and guide conservation strategies as more than 80% of the world's coral reefs have experienced bleaching since 2023.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
64% of sources are High Factuality
Daily Briefing
ALMA images reveal Milky Way core; Japan set to deploy missiles near Taiwan; ancient carvings rival early human language


13 Articles •
Hacker Used Anthropic's Claude AI to Breach Mexican Government, Researchers Say
Left 100%
What happened: Mexico's Ministry of Anticorruption launched investigations into alleged data breaches at 20 public institutions, examining whether personal databases were compromised through external hacking on the deep web or internal credential misuse. The ministry announced the probes on Dec. 31 following a surge in cyberattacks, including a September breach affecting nearly 20 million IMSS pensioners.
Why it matters: AI-driven attacks now execute intrusions in hours instead of weeks, while insiders account for roughly 70% of government breaches in Mexico. With 80.7% of Mexican agencies compromised last year and breach costs averaging $4.16 million in Latin America, your personal data held by federal institutions faces unprecedented risk heading into 2026.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
85% of sources are Original Reporting

31 Articles •
Largest-Ever ALMA Image Reveals Milky Way's Hidden Core
Left 32%
Center 68%
What happened: ALMA released the largest and most detailed image ever captured of the Milky Way's Central Molecular Zone, a 650-light-year-wide region surrounding supermassive black hole Sagittarius A*. The survey detected dozens of molecules in the cold gas clouds where massive stars form under extreme conditions.
Why it matters: This breakthrough reveals how stars are born, live, and die near our galaxy's center in conditions impossible to study elsewhere, helping scientists understand galactic evolution. The region hosts the most massive stars in our galaxy, many ending in powerful supernovae that shape the cosmos.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
71% of sources are High Factuality

44 Articles •
Japan to Deploy Missiles on Island Near Taiwan by 2031
Left 32%
Center 29%
Right 39%
The details: Japan will deploy Type-03 medium-range surface-to-air missiles on Yonaguni island by March 2031, with an electronic-warfare unit arriving in fiscal 2026. The missiles, with 50km range and 360-degree tracking capability, will be stationed just 110km from Taiwan alongside roughly 100 personnel at the existing military base.
Why it matters: This deployment strengthens Japan's air defenses amid rising China-Taiwan tensions but risks escalating regional conflict that could draw in the US and allies. China has already retaliated with export curbs on Japanese firms, tourism restrictions, and naval activities, threatening Japan's economy and regional stability.
91% of sources are Original Reporting

84 Articles •
CIA Launches Public Recruitment Drive Inside Iran
L 22%
Center 57%
R 21%
What happened: The CIA published Farsi-language guidance on Tuesday across X, Instagram, and YouTube, instructing Iranians on how to securely contact the agency using Tor, VPNs, and disposable devices. The video has accumulated tens of millions of views and comes as nationwide university protests continue in Iran and U.S.-Iran nuclear talks resume in Geneva this week.
Why it matters: This rare public intelligence recruitment reflects escalating U.S.-Iran tensions as Trump has assembled the largest U.S. military presence in the Middle East in decades and threatened strikes over Iran's nuclear program. The outreach could yield critical intelligence but also poses serious risks to Iranian activists and informants who respond, potentially affecting both diplomatic negotiations and protester safety.
68% of sources are High Factuality

42 Articles •
Study: 40,000-Year-Old Carvings Approach Complexity of Earliest Writing
Left 29%
Center 46%
Right 25%
The discovery: Researchers analyzed over 3,000 geometric signs on 260 Ice Age objects from southwestern Germany dated 43,000 to 34,000 years ago, finding repeated sequences of dots, lines, crosses and notches with statistical complexity comparable to Mesopotamian proto-cuneiform from 3500 BCE. The computational analysis shows these Aurignacian culture marks were intentionally applied in patterns suggesting an information-encoding system, potentially pushing back proto-writing origins by more than 30,000 years.
Why it matters: This finding reveals that Stone Age humans 40,000 years ago possessed cognitive abilities and symbolic thinking comparable to modern humans, using systematic conventions passed down over 10,000 years. The marks were applied selectively—crosses only on animals and tools, dots never on tools—and some sequences appear in rows of 12-13, possibly tracking calendric or seasonal information relevant to hunter-gatherer survival.
88% of sources are Original Reporting
62% of sources are High Factuality

7 Articles •
Study Maps Quantum Effect That Could Enable Battery-Free Devices
Center 100%
The discovery: Scientists at QUT and Nanyang Technological University mapped how the nonlinear Hall effect in bismuth telluride converts alternating signals directly into direct current without diodes, remaining stable up to room temperature. The team showed tiny imperfections control the effect at low temperatures while crystal vibrations take over as it warms, causing voltage direction to flip.
What it means: This quantum effect could power self-powered sensors, wearable technology and battery-free chips that draw energy from wireless signals or their surroundings. The discovery enables smaller, faster and more efficient devices for next-generation wireless networks by eliminating the need for batteries and bulky power conversion components.
71% of sources are Original Reporting

14 Articles •
Citizen Scientists Find World's Largest Coral Colony on Great Barrier Reef
L 22%
Center 78%
The discovery: A mother-and-daughter team of citizen scientists found a J-shaped Pavona clavus coral colony spanning 111 meters and covering 3,973 square meters on the Great Barrier Reef late last year. Sophie Kalkowski-Pope and Jan Pope documented the formation using underwater measurements and high-resolution imagery to create a 3D model, making it the largest thoroughly documented coral colony in the world.
Why it matters: The discovery helps scientists identify crucial sources of reef recovery and better target protection efforts amid ongoing climate threats, as the Great Barrier Reef suffered its sixth mass bleaching event since 2016 in 2025. The 3D model allows researchers to monitor changes over time and guide conservation strategies as more than 80% of the world's coral reefs have experienced bleaching since 2023.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
64% of sources are High Factuality