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Journalist abducted in Iraq, South Korea's export boom
294 Articles •
American Journalist Abducted in Baghdad, One Suspect Arrested
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What happened: Award-winning American journalist Shelly Kittleson was forcibly abducted by armed men yesterday evening on Saadoun Street in central Baghdad. Iraqi security forces pursued the kidnappers, intercepting one vehicle that overturned near Al-Haswa in Babil province and arresting one suspect, while Kittleson remains missing.
Why it matters: U.S. officials say the detained suspect has ties to Iran-aligned militia Kataib Hezbollah, and Kittleson had received multiple warnings about kidnapping threats just hours before her abduction. The State Department continues urging all Americans to leave Iraq immediately amid heightened risks from Iranian-backed groups.
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60% of sources are High Factuality
35 Articles •
Qubits Needed to Crack Encryption Fall 200-Fold in Under a Year
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The breakthrough: Researchers at Caltech and Oratomic found that quantum computers may need only 10,000-20,000 qubits to run Shor's algorithm and break modern encryption, down from previous estimates of millions. The advance uses neutral-atom platforms and new error-correction techniques that reduce the physical qubits needed per logical qubit from roughly 1,000 to about five, making operational quantum computers conceivable by decade's end.
Why it matters: A quantum computer with 26,000 qubits could break ECC-256 encryption protecting Bitcoin and Ethereum wallets in about 10 days, allowing attackers to derive private keys and control funds. RSA-2048 encryption securing financial institutions and internet traffic could fall to 100,000 qubits in roughly three months, threatening banking information, private messages, and digital certificates you rely on daily.
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97% of sources are Original Reporting
7 Articles •
New Studies Reveal How DNA Motion and Cell Mechanics Drive Cancer
Center 100%
The discoveries: Two studies reveal fundamental cellular quality control: DHX29 protein identifies and marks mRNA molecules loaded with non-optimal synonymous codons for disposal, while cohesin and NIPBL proteins continuously form and disassemble DNA loops at varying speeds across the genome. When NIPBL is depleted, genomes unfold unevenly—some regions change in minutes, others take hours—directly affecting which genes turn on or off in different cell types.
Why it matters: Understanding how DHX29 detects problematic mRNA and how dynamic genome folding maintains cell identity could lead to new cancer and developmental disorder treatments. When these quality-control systems malfunction—DHX29 fails to clear faulty mRNA or NIPBL can't form proper DNA loops—cells lose their ability to regulate genes correctly, a dysfunction implicated in cancers, autism-related disorders, and other diseases.
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100% of sources are Original Reporting
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71% of sources are High Factuality
20 Articles •
South Korea Exports Hit Record $86B as Global Factories Stockpile Amid Iran War
 
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The numbers: South Korea's exports surged 48.3% to a record $86.13 billion in March, driven by semiconductor shipments that jumped 151.4% to $32.84 billion on AI server demand and rising memory chip prices. Exports to the Middle East plunged 49.1% to $900 million due to the Iran war, while the trade surplus widened to an all-time high of $25.74 billion.
What it means: The government proposed a 26.2 trillion won ($17.3 billion) emergency budget with shopping vouchers of 100,000 to 600,000 won per person to cushion Middle East war impacts on fuel costs and inflation. Economists lowered South Korea's 2026 GDP forecast from 2.2% to 2.0% due to supply disruptions and rising oil import bills, though strong chip demand should support near-term growth.
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85% of sources are Original Reporting
33 Articles •
Israel Used Secret AI Platform to Hunt Iranian Leaders
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What happened: Israel used hacked Tehran street cameras and a secret AI platform to track Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's movements and location, transferring feeds to Israeli servers where algorithms identified addresses, routes and security details. The operation, demonstrated on Feb. 28, contributed to killing Khamenei despite years of warnings about Iran's compromised surveillance systems.
Why it matters: This marks a warfare shift where AI can now weaponize civilian surveillance infrastructure—sifting through massive video feeds in real time to identify targets, a task that once took analysts months. With over one billion cameras worldwide, many poorly secured with default passwords, your own security cameras could potentially be exploited by adversaries during conflicts.
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67% of sources are Original Reporting
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67% of sources are High Factuality
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