Daily Briefing
Meta watching employee keystrokes: Florida probes OpenAI; a Horse racing empire being born

266 Articles •
Florida Opens Criminal Probe Into OpenAI Over Campus Shooting
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Center 50%
R 20%
What happened: Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier launched a criminal investigation into OpenAI after prosecutors reviewed hundreds of ChatGPT messages from accused gunman Phoenix Ikner before the April 2025 Florida State University shooting that killed two and injured six. The state is examining whether the AI chatbot provided advice on weapons, timing, and crowd locations that aided the attack, marking the first criminal probe of an AI company for a user's violent crime.
Why it matters: This unprecedented case could establish whether AI companies face criminal liability for user actions, directly affecting ChatGPT's 900 million weekly users whose chat logs may now be treated as criminal evidence. The investigation has prompted Florida lawmakers to fast-track AI safety legislation and sparked civil lawsuits from victims' families, potentially reshaping how AI platforms operate and what protections exist for users.
66% of sources are Original Reporting
61% of sources are High Factuality

13 Articles •
Study: Extreme Weather Disrupted 94 Elections Worldwide
Left 25%
Center 38%
Right 37%
The numbers: At least 94 elections across 52 countries faced disruptions from natural hazards between 2006 and 2025, with 26 postponed entirely or partially. In 2024 alone, 23 elections in 18 countries were affected by floods, hurricanes, wildfires, and heatwaves, impacting millions of voters globally.
Why it matters: Climate change is tripling natural hazards, threatening democratic participation as extreme weather damages polling infrastructure, displaces voters, and forces last-minute electoral changes. These disruptions can spread conspiracy theories, deepen hardship for vulnerable populations, and place growing pressure on fragile democratic systems worldwide.
92% of sources are Original Reporting
62% of sources are High Factuality

79 Articles •
Meta to Track Employee Keystrokes, Mouse Clicks to Train AI Models
Left 35%
Center 44%
R 21%
What's happening: Meta is rolling out Model Capability Initiative software on U.S. employees' work computers this week to record mouse movements, clicks, keystrokes, and periodic screenshots. The tracking runs across approved work apps like Gmail and internal tools to generate training data for AI agents that struggle with basic computer tasks like dropdown menus and keyboard shortcuts.
Why it matters: The tracking raises privacy concerns as employees cannot opt out and comes as Meta prepares to cut up to 20% of its workforce starting in May. Workers are effectively training AI systems designed to automate their own jobs, while European employees may be protected by stricter privacy laws that could bar similar monitoring.
61% of sources are Original Reporting

28 Articles •
Churchill Downs Acquires Preakness Stakes Brand for $85 Million
Left 38%
Center 54%
8%
The details: Churchill Downs Inc., owner of the Kentucky Derby, purchased the intellectual property rights to the Preakness Stakes and Black-Eyed Susan Stakes from 1/ST Maryland LLC for $85 million yesterday. Maryland will continue hosting both races under an exclusive license agreement with an annual fee, and the deal closes after this year's Preakness on May 16 at Laurel Park while Pimlico undergoes a $400 million reconstruction.
Why it matters: Churchill Downs now controls the branding and commercial rights for the first two legs of the Triple Crown, giving it unprecedented influence over race scheduling, media deals, and broadcast partnerships with networks like NBC, FOX, Amazon, and Netflix. The Preakness may shift to three weeks after the Derby instead of two, addressing concerns from owners who've skipped the race in four of the last five years due to tight spacing.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
68% of sources are Original Reporting
82% of sources are High Factuality

91 Articles •
SpaceX Secures Option to Acquire Cursor for $60 Billion
L 22%
Center 50%
Right 28%
The details: SpaceX announced yesterday a partnership with AI coding startup Cursor that includes an unusual option: later this year, SpaceX can either acquire Cursor for $60 billion or pay the company $10 billion. The deal grants Cursor access to SpaceX's Colossus supercomputer in Memphis with hundreds of thousands of Nvidia GPUs to train its Composer AI models.
Why it matters: This partnership intensifies competition among AI coding tools that millions of software developers rely on daily, with Cursor competing against Anthropic's Claude Code and OpenAI's Codex. The deal comes as SpaceX prepares for what could be history's largest IPO this summer, targeting a $1.75 trillion valuation that would make it one of the world's ten biggest companies.
62% of sources are Original Reporting
Daily Briefing
Meta watching employee keystrokes: Florida probes OpenAI; a Horse racing empire being born


266 Articles •
Florida Opens Criminal Probe Into OpenAI Over Campus Shooting
Left 30%
Center 50%
R 20%
What happened: Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier launched a criminal investigation into OpenAI after prosecutors reviewed hundreds of ChatGPT messages from accused gunman Phoenix Ikner before the April 2025 Florida State University shooting that killed two and injured six. The state is examining whether the AI chatbot provided advice on weapons, timing, and crowd locations that aided the attack, marking the first criminal probe of an AI company for a user's violent crime.
Why it matters: This unprecedented case could establish whether AI companies face criminal liability for user actions, directly affecting ChatGPT's 900 million weekly users whose chat logs may now be treated as criminal evidence. The investigation has prompted Florida lawmakers to fast-track AI safety legislation and sparked civil lawsuits from victims' families, potentially reshaping how AI platforms operate and what protections exist for users.
66% of sources are Original Reporting
61% of sources are High Factuality

13 Articles •
Study: Extreme Weather Disrupted 94 Elections Worldwide
Left 25%
Center 38%
Right 37%
The numbers: At least 94 elections across 52 countries faced disruptions from natural hazards between 2006 and 2025, with 26 postponed entirely or partially. In 2024 alone, 23 elections in 18 countries were affected by floods, hurricanes, wildfires, and heatwaves, impacting millions of voters globally.
Why it matters: Climate change is tripling natural hazards, threatening democratic participation as extreme weather damages polling infrastructure, displaces voters, and forces last-minute electoral changes. These disruptions can spread conspiracy theories, deepen hardship for vulnerable populations, and place growing pressure on fragile democratic systems worldwide.
92% of sources are Original Reporting
62% of sources are High Factuality

79 Articles •
Meta to Track Employee Keystrokes, Mouse Clicks to Train AI Models
Left 35%
Center 44%
R 21%
What's happening: Meta is rolling out Model Capability Initiative software on U.S. employees' work computers this week to record mouse movements, clicks, keystrokes, and periodic screenshots. The tracking runs across approved work apps like Gmail and internal tools to generate training data for AI agents that struggle with basic computer tasks like dropdown menus and keyboard shortcuts.
Why it matters: The tracking raises privacy concerns as employees cannot opt out and comes as Meta prepares to cut up to 20% of its workforce starting in May. Workers are effectively training AI systems designed to automate their own jobs, while European employees may be protected by stricter privacy laws that could bar similar monitoring.
61% of sources are Original Reporting

28 Articles •
Churchill Downs Acquires Preakness Stakes Brand for $85 Million
Left 38%
Center 54%
8%
The details: Churchill Downs Inc., owner of the Kentucky Derby, purchased the intellectual property rights to the Preakness Stakes and Black-Eyed Susan Stakes from 1/ST Maryland LLC for $85 million yesterday. Maryland will continue hosting both races under an exclusive license agreement with an annual fee, and the deal closes after this year's Preakness on May 16 at Laurel Park while Pimlico undergoes a $400 million reconstruction.
Why it matters: Churchill Downs now controls the branding and commercial rights for the first two legs of the Triple Crown, giving it unprecedented influence over race scheduling, media deals, and broadcast partnerships with networks like NBC, FOX, Amazon, and Netflix. The Preakness may shift to three weeks after the Derby instead of two, addressing concerns from owners who've skipped the race in four of the last five years due to tight spacing.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
68% of sources are Original Reporting
82% of sources are High Factuality

91 Articles •
SpaceX Secures Option to Acquire Cursor for $60 Billion
L 22%
Center 50%
Right 28%
The details: SpaceX announced yesterday a partnership with AI coding startup Cursor that includes an unusual option: later this year, SpaceX can either acquire Cursor for $60 billion or pay the company $10 billion. The deal grants Cursor access to SpaceX's Colossus supercomputer in Memphis with hundreds of thousands of Nvidia GPUs to train its Composer AI models.
Why it matters: This partnership intensifies competition among AI coding tools that millions of software developers rely on daily, with Cursor competing against Anthropic's Claude Code and OpenAI's Codex. The deal comes as SpaceX prepares for what could be history's largest IPO this summer, targeting a $1.75 trillion valuation that would make it one of the world's ten biggest companies.
62% of sources are Original Reporting