Daily Briefing
Mosque attacks in Syria and Nigeria; DHS enacts biometrics for foreign nationals; Japan makes big budget moves

14 Articles •
China Develops Surface that Turns Radar Into Electricity
L 17%
Center 50%
Right 33%
What happened: Chinese researchers at Xidian University developed a reconfigurable intelligent surface that converts electromagnetic waves, including radar, into electricity while simultaneously performing sensing and communications. The technology enables stealth aircraft to harvest enemy radar beams as a power source and supports 6G networks through integrated sensing, communication, and energy harvesting on a single hardware platform.
Why it matters: This development could accelerate China's lead in the global 6G race, conferring decisive economic and national security advantages in next-generation wireless networks, satellites, and IoT connectivity. The technology may upend electronic warfare dynamics by turning radar threats into power resources and could impact positioning, security systems, and coverage in urban environments where direct line-of-sight is obstructed.
100% of sources are Original Reporting

235 Articles •
Magnitude 7.0 Earthquake Shakes Taiwan with Limited Damage
L 24%
Center 49%
Right 27%
What happened: A magnitude 7.0 earthquake struck 20 miles off Taiwan's northeastern coast near Yilan yesterday at 11:05 p.m., shaking buildings across the island including Taipei. The quake occurred at a depth of 73 kilometers, with no major damage or casualties reported, though over 3,000 homes briefly lost power.
Why it matters: Taiwan sits at the junction of two tectonic plates, making earthquakes frequent and potentially deadly—over 2,000 died in 1999 and 17 in April 2024. Authorities warn residents to stay alert for aftershocks of magnitude 5.5 to 6.0 over the coming day, with metro services and TSMC facilities briefly disrupted.

71 Articles •
Russia Launches Three Iranian Satellites Amid Strategic Partnership
L 21%
Center 50%
Right 29%
What happened: Russia launched three Iranian communications satellites—Paya, Kowsar, and Zafar-2—into a 500-kilometer orbit from Vostochny Cosmodrome this Sunday. Paya, weighing 150 kilograms, is Iran's heaviest satellite ever deployed, with all three featuring 3-meter resolution imaging for water, agriculture, and environmental management over five-year lifespans.
Why it matters: This marks the second Russian-Iranian satellite launch since July, reinforcing their strategic partnership signed in January amid U.S. concerns that such launches violate U.N. resolutions on ballistic missile technology. The satellites will provide years of imaging capabilities for resource management, while highlighting deepening Russia-Iran cooperation despite international scrutiny over potential missile proliferation risks.

370 Articles •
Myanmar Military Holds Contested Election Amid Civil War
Left 37%
Center 40%
R 23%
What happened: Myanmar's military junta began a multi-phase election on Sunday, the first since the 2021 coup that ousted Aung San Suu Kyi. Voting is restricted to junta-controlled areas while rebel-held territories remain excluded, effectively disenfranchising tens of millions in a nation of 50 million people.
Why it matters: International monitors, the UN, and human rights groups condemn the election as a sham designed to legitimize military rule through proxy parties. The vote occurs amid ongoing civil war, with over 3.6 million displaced, 12 million facing hunger in 2026, and at least 7,000 killed since the coup.

47 Articles •
China Issues Draft Rules to Regulate AI
L 18%
Center 41%
Right 41%
What happened: China's cyberspace regulator released draft rules this weekend requiring AI companion platforms to monitor users' emotional states, issue warnings every two hours, and intervene when addiction or extreme emotions appear. Providers must conduct security assessments, report to provincial authorities at one million users, and assume safety responsibility across the product lifecycle including algorithm review and data protection.
Why it matters: With China's AI user base doubling to 515 million in six months and studies showing 45.8% of university students using chatbots exhibit higher depression levels, these rules would create the world's most prescriptive framework for AI companions. The regulations shift responsibility to companies and follow California's similar law, signaling a global reckoning as governments move to protect hundreds of millions of users from psychological harm and addiction.
72% of sources are Original Reporting

18 Articles •
NASA to Launch Pandora Satellite to Search for Alien Life
Center 100%
The details: NASA has selected SpaceX to launch the Pandora satellite, a mission designed to study the atmospheres of distant exoplanets and better understand their composition and characteristics.
Why it matters: This mission will advance our understanding of planets beyond our solar system, potentially identifying worlds with conditions that could support life and expanding humanity's knowledge of the universe.
100% of sources are Original Reporting

8 Articles •
First Measurable Molecular Difference Found in Autistic Brains
Left 100%
The discovery: Yale researchers found autistic adults have approximately 15% fewer mGlu5 glutamate receptors brain-wide compared to neurotypical adults, with the largest differences in the cerebral cortex. Lower receptor availability correlated with altered EEG patterns of excitatory brain activity, linking molecular differences to functional brain signaling.
Why it matters: This molecular signature could enable objective diagnosis beyond behavioral observation and guide targeted therapies for individuals whose autism symptoms impair daily life. EEG may offer a cheaper, accessible alternative to costly PET scans for monitoring glutamate function, making future research and clinical applications more practical.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
88% of sources are Original Reporting
Daily Briefing
Mosque attacks in Syria and Nigeria; DHS enacts biometrics for foreign nationals; Japan makes big budget moves


14 Articles •
China Develops Surface that Turns Radar Into Electricity
L 17%
Center 50%
Right 33%
What happened: Chinese researchers at Xidian University developed a reconfigurable intelligent surface that converts electromagnetic waves, including radar, into electricity while simultaneously performing sensing and communications. The technology enables stealth aircraft to harvest enemy radar beams as a power source and supports 6G networks through integrated sensing, communication, and energy harvesting on a single hardware platform.
Why it matters: This development could accelerate China's lead in the global 6G race, conferring decisive economic and national security advantages in next-generation wireless networks, satellites, and IoT connectivity. The technology may upend electronic warfare dynamics by turning radar threats into power resources and could impact positioning, security systems, and coverage in urban environments where direct line-of-sight is obstructed.
100% of sources are Original Reporting

235 Articles •
Magnitude 7.0 Earthquake Shakes Taiwan with Limited Damage
L 24%
Center 49%
Right 27%
What happened: A magnitude 7.0 earthquake struck 20 miles off Taiwan's northeastern coast near Yilan yesterday at 11:05 p.m., shaking buildings across the island including Taipei. The quake occurred at a depth of 73 kilometers, with no major damage or casualties reported, though over 3,000 homes briefly lost power.
Why it matters: Taiwan sits at the junction of two tectonic plates, making earthquakes frequent and potentially deadly—over 2,000 died in 1999 and 17 in April 2024. Authorities warn residents to stay alert for aftershocks of magnitude 5.5 to 6.0 over the coming day, with metro services and TSMC facilities briefly disrupted.

71 Articles •
Russia Launches Three Iranian Satellites Amid Strategic Partnership
L 21%
Center 50%
Right 29%
What happened: Russia launched three Iranian communications satellites—Paya, Kowsar, and Zafar-2—into a 500-kilometer orbit from Vostochny Cosmodrome this Sunday. Paya, weighing 150 kilograms, is Iran's heaviest satellite ever deployed, with all three featuring 3-meter resolution imaging for water, agriculture, and environmental management over five-year lifespans.
Why it matters: This marks the second Russian-Iranian satellite launch since July, reinforcing their strategic partnership signed in January amid U.S. concerns that such launches violate U.N. resolutions on ballistic missile technology. The satellites will provide years of imaging capabilities for resource management, while highlighting deepening Russia-Iran cooperation despite international scrutiny over potential missile proliferation risks.

370 Articles •
Myanmar Military Holds Contested Election Amid Civil War
Left 37%
Center 40%
R 23%
What happened: Myanmar's military junta began a multi-phase election on Sunday, the first since the 2021 coup that ousted Aung San Suu Kyi. Voting is restricted to junta-controlled areas while rebel-held territories remain excluded, effectively disenfranchising tens of millions in a nation of 50 million people.
Why it matters: International monitors, the UN, and human rights groups condemn the election as a sham designed to legitimize military rule through proxy parties. The vote occurs amid ongoing civil war, with over 3.6 million displaced, 12 million facing hunger in 2026, and at least 7,000 killed since the coup.

47 Articles •
China Issues Draft Rules to Regulate AI
L 18%
Center 41%
Right 41%
What happened: China's cyberspace regulator released draft rules this weekend requiring AI companion platforms to monitor users' emotional states, issue warnings every two hours, and intervene when addiction or extreme emotions appear. Providers must conduct security assessments, report to provincial authorities at one million users, and assume safety responsibility across the product lifecycle including algorithm review and data protection.
Why it matters: With China's AI user base doubling to 515 million in six months and studies showing 45.8% of university students using chatbots exhibit higher depression levels, these rules would create the world's most prescriptive framework for AI companions. The regulations shift responsibility to companies and follow California's similar law, signaling a global reckoning as governments move to protect hundreds of millions of users from psychological harm and addiction.
72% of sources are Original Reporting

18 Articles •
NASA to Launch Pandora Satellite to Search for Alien Life
Center 100%
The details: NASA has selected SpaceX to launch the Pandora satellite, a mission designed to study the atmospheres of distant exoplanets and better understand their composition and characteristics.
Why it matters: This mission will advance our understanding of planets beyond our solar system, potentially identifying worlds with conditions that could support life and expanding humanity's knowledge of the universe.
100% of sources are Original Reporting

8 Articles •
First Measurable Molecular Difference Found in Autistic Brains
Left 100%
The discovery: Yale researchers found autistic adults have approximately 15% fewer mGlu5 glutamate receptors brain-wide compared to neurotypical adults, with the largest differences in the cerebral cortex. Lower receptor availability correlated with altered EEG patterns of excitatory brain activity, linking molecular differences to functional brain signaling.
Why it matters: This molecular signature could enable objective diagnosis beyond behavioral observation and guide targeted therapies for individuals whose autism symptoms impair daily life. EEG may offer a cheaper, accessible alternative to costly PET scans for monitoring glutamate function, making future research and clinical applications more practical.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
88% of sources are Original Reporting