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Israel claims secret nuclear site struck; Syria amasses troops near Lebanon border; China ousts more generals
18 Articles •
Polymarket Pulls Nuclear Detonation Betting Market Amid Backlash
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What happened: Polymarket removed a market allowing users to bet on nuclear weapon detonations by March 31, June 30, or before 2027, after it drew over $650,000 in trading volume and sparked intense public outrage. The removal came amid suspicious trades tied to Iran strikes and growing concerns that government insiders could profit from classified military information.
Why it matters: Sen. Chris Murphy plans to introduce legislation banning bets on war and military strikes, while the CFTC signals new rulemaking for prediction markets is coming soon. The controversy raises fundamental questions about whether platforms should allow betting on death and war, and whether your government officials could be secretly profiting from military decisions instead of focusing on national security.
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13 Articles •
Belgium Blocks US Mining Firm From Colonial Congo Archives
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What happened: Belgium refused KoBold Metals direct access to colonial-era Congolese geological archives at the Royal Museum for Central Africa in Tervuren, despite a July 2025 agreement between KoBold and the DRC to digitize the 500 meters of records. Belgian authorities cite public archive rules and lack of a direct contract, promoting instead an EU-funded digitization program that began last month and won't finish until around 2031.
Why it matters: The century-old archives contain strategic data on cobalt, copper, and lithium deposits essential for energy transition and AI-driven mineral exploration. Control over access and digitization pace will directly affect investment decisions, supply chain security to the United States, and the timeline for developing critical minerals needed for batteries and clean energy technologies worldwide.
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26 Articles •
TikTok Refuses End-to-End Encryption for Direct Messages
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What happened: TikTok confirmed it will not add end-to-end encryption to direct messages, diverging from rivals like WhatsApp, Signal, and Instagram. The company says this protects users, especially young people, by allowing authorized employees and law enforcement to access DMs when necessary under specific circumstances.
Why it matters: Your TikTok DMs can be read by company employees and accessed by law enforcement, unlike messages on WhatsApp or Signal. This raises privacy concerns given TikTok's Chinese ownership, though the company argues it helps prevent grooming, harassment, and illegal content in messages.
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10 Articles •
Iran-Linked Hackers Exploit Surveillance Camera Flaws Across Middle East
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What happened: Iran-linked hackers have intensified scanning and exploitation of critical vulnerabilities in Hikvision and Dahua surveillance cameras across the Middle East since late February. Check Point Research observed attacks targeting devices in Israel, Cyprus, Lebanon, Qatar, Kuwait and other regional states, exploiting flaws including CVE-2023-6895, CVE-2025-34067, and CVE-2021-33044.
Why it matters: The campaign threatens surveillance security and privacy across multiple countries and signals broader critical infrastructure risks, as the same IRGC-linked attackers previously targeted U.S. water facilities and industrial systems. Organizations using vulnerable Hikvision or Dahua cameras face immediate risk of compromise, potentially enabling intelligence gathering or infrastructure disruption.
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24 Articles •
Microsoft Locks Down Discord Server After Microslop Ban Backfires
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What happened: Microsoft's official Copilot Discord server automatically blocked messages containing 'Microslop,' a mocking nickname for the company's AI push, around March 1st. Users quickly bypassed the filter with variations like 'Microsl0p,' prompting moderators to lock down the entire server, restrict posting permissions, and hide message history within days.
Why it matters: The incident highlights Microsoft's struggle to rebuild trust as users grow frustrated with forced AI integration across Windows 11, intrusive Copilot features, and resource-heavy processes. The attempted censorship amplified criticism instead of containing it, damaging Microsoft's reputation as competitors like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google continue advancing their AI offerings.
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