Skip to main content
See every side of every news story
Daily Briefing
Overmatch brief; Genetic roots to most mental health disorders uncovered; wide strikes across Portugal
168 Articles •
OpenAI Launches GPT-5.2 Amid Heated Competition with Google
Left 28%
Center 43%
Right 29%
What happened: OpenAI released GPT-5.2 yesterday in three versions (Instant, Thinking, Pro) to paid ChatGPT subscribers and API developers, claiming major improvements in coding, math, reasoning, and vision capabilities. The launch follows an internal 'code red' memo from CEO Sam Altman as Google's Gemini 3 topped industry leaderboards, with OpenAI now positioning GPT-5.2 as performing at or above human expert level on professional tasks.
Why it matters: GPT-5.2 produces 30-38% fewer errors and hallucinations than its predecessor, making it more reliable for everyday professional work like research, writing, and decision-making. OpenAI claims enterprise users can save 40-60 minutes daily (over 10 hours weekly for heavy users) with improved capabilities in handling complex multi-step tasks, analyzing large documents, and generating production-grade code across spreadsheets, presentations, and data analysis.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
68% of sources are Original Reporting
206 Articles •
NATO Chief Warns Russia Could Attack Alliance in 5 Years
Left 28%
Center 29%
Right 43%
What happened: NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte warned yesterday in Berlin that Russia could target NATO members within five years, urging allies to rapidly increase defense spending as Russian drones violated Romanian and Polish airspace and jets entered Estonian territory, prompting NATO's new Eastern Sentry air defense initiative.
Why it matters: Rutte cautioned that NATO members may face war on the scale their grandparents endured in World War II if allies remain complacent, as Russia now produces thousands of attack drones and missiles monthly and has suffered over one million casualties since invading Ukraine. The alliance must prepare as Russia has brought war back to Europe through hybrid operations including sabotage, drone incursions, and infrastructure interference.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
74% of sources are Original Reporting
15 Articles •
Sumatran Floods May Have Killed 11% of Rare Tapanuli Orangutans
Left 45%
11%
Right 44%
What happened: Cyclone Senyar struck Sumatra in late November, triggering catastrophic floods and landslides that destroyed 4,800-7,200 hectares of forest habitat. Scientists estimate up to 35 Tapanuli orangutans—4% of the species' total population of fewer than 800—may have been killed, with one carcass already discovered in mud and debris.
Why it matters: Scientists describe this as an "extinction-level disturbance" for the world's rarest great ape, discovered as a distinct species only in 2017. Conservationists have lost contact with all 10 monitored orangutans and warn that industrial projects like hydropower dams and gold mining, combined with climate change-driven extreme weather, threaten to push the species to extinction.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
80% of sources are Original Reporting
176 Articles •
EU Freezes €210B in Russian Assets Indefinitely
Left 37%
Center 40%
R 23%
What happened: The EU activated Article 122 emergency powers this week to indefinitely immobilize €210 billion in Russian sovereign assets, primarily held at Brussels-based Euroclear. The move replaces six-month renewals requiring unanimous approval, preventing Hungary and Slovakia from vetoing sanctions and strengthening leverage for potential Ukraine support loans worth up to €90 billion over two years.
Why it matters: Belgium warns the unprecedented asset freeze risks undermining investor confidence in European financial markets and could trigger legal retaliation from Russia, with concerns that countries like China may withdraw investments from Europe. The move bypasses traditional unanimity requirements and could expose Belgium to significant liability, while experts question whether emergency powers legally apply when Europe is not at war.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
75% of sources are Original Reporting
158 Articles •
Over 400 Civilians Killed in Fighting in Eastern DR Congo
Left 40%
Center 39%
R 21%
What happened: Rwanda-backed M23 rebels captured the strategic port city of Uvira in eastern DRC this week after a rapid offensive beginning early December, killing over 413 civilians and displacing more than 500,000 people. The offensive came just days after a US-brokered peace agreement signed last week by DRC and Rwandan presidents, with UN experts estimating up to 4,000 Rwandan forces operating inside Congo.
Why it matters: The fall of Uvira threatens regional stability as the city sits only 20 kilometers from Burundi's capital Bujumbura, with over 30,000 refugees fleeing across borders in recent days. Hospitals are overwhelmed with wounded patients, and the conflict over mineral-rich eastern Congo has created one of the world's worst humanitarian crises with more than seven million people displaced.
341 Articles •
Alleged Charlie Kirk Assassin Tyler Robinson Makes First In-Person Court Appearance
L 22%
Center 53%
Right 25%
What happened: Tyler Robinson, 22, made his first public in-person court appearance Thursday in Provo for the fatal shooting of conservative activist Charlie Kirk on September 10 at Utah Valley University. Robinson faces seven charges including aggravated murder, obstruction of justice, and witness tampering, with prosecutors seeking the death penalty.
Why it matters: Judge Tony Graf is weighing whether to allow cameras and media access in this high-profile case, balancing Robinson's right to a fair trial against public transparency. The judge scheduled a December 29 hearing to rule on media access issues and set preliminary hearing dates for May 18-21, with the case drawing extraordinary national attention.
Seal Check SVG Icon
60% of sources are High Factuality
News
Feed Dots Icon
For You
Search Icon
Search
Blindspot LogoBlindspotLocal