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Ariane close to maiden launch; Climate change puts grazing lands at risk; AI decodes ancient roman board games
124 Articles •
Lawmaker Reads Six Names from Epstein Files on House Floor
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What happened: Bipartisan lawmakers reviewed un-redacted Epstein files at DOJ on Monday and found six names improperly redacted, including at least one US citizen and a high-ranking foreign official. After congressional pressure, DOJ un-redacted the names Tuesday, which Rep. Ro Khanna read publicly on the House floor, questioning why it required lawmakers' intervention to force transparency.
Why it matters: The controversy reveals potential DOJ efforts to shield powerful individuals connected to Epstein's crimes, undermining transparency laws passed by Congress. With millions of documents still under review, lawmakers warn the six names found in two hours suggest many more co-conspirators may remain hidden, affecting survivors' pursuit of justice and public trust in federal law enforcement.
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172 Articles •
Trump to Repeal Finding that Greenhouse Gases Threaten Health
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What's happening: The EPA is finalizing a rule this week to rescind the 2009 endangerment finding that declared six greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide and methane, endanger public health. This determination has served as the legal foundation for federal vehicle emissions standards, power plant limits, and other climate regulations since the Obama administration.
Why it matters: Revoking this finding would immediately eliminate federal requirements for vehicle emission standards and place power plant and industrial facility regulations in legal jeopardy, potentially costing trillions in affected regulations. Environmental groups plan immediate legal challenges, while the regulatory uncertainty could force companies to navigate a patchwork of state-level rules and bifurcated markets.
18 Articles •
California Man Sentenced for Spying for China as Campaign Aide
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What happened: Yaoning Sun, 65, of Chino Hills was sentenced Monday to 48 months in federal prison after pleading guilty in October 2025 to acting as an unregistered agent of China. From 2022 to January 2024, he worked as a campaign adviser to help elect Arcadia City Council member Eileen Wang, sent surveillance reports to Chinese consulate officials in Los Angeles, tracked then-Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-Wen during her April 2023 U.S. visit, and published pro-China propaganda while countering Falun Gong and pro-Taiwan groups.
Why it matters: This case highlights China's efforts to influence U.S. local elections and government at all levels, raising concerns about foreign interference in your community's political process. Federal prosecutors emphasized the need for substantial sentences to deter similar unregistered foreign agent activity that undermines voter trust and targets vulnerable communities including Falun Gong practitioners and pro-Taiwan groups in Southern California.
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7 Articles •
Fukushima Pig Hybrids Reveal Unexpected Genetic Dilution Pattern
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What happened: After the 2011 Fukushima nuclear accident, escaped domestic pigs bred with wild boar in abandoned areas. Researchers analyzing DNA from 191 wild boar and 10 domestic pigs collected between 2015 and 2018 found that pig maternal lineages carrying fast-breeding traits unexpectedly accelerated genetic turnover, rapidly diluting pig genes through backcrossing, with some hybrids already over five generations removed.
Why it matters: This research reveals how maternal lineage shapes genetic change in hybrid populations, offering practical insights for invasive species management worldwide. As feral pigs expand globally, understanding these mechanisms could help conservation efforts prioritize removal of hybrids with specific genetic backgrounds for more targeted control strategies.
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16 Articles •
UK Orders Deletion of Court Reporting Platform
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What happened: The Ministry of Justice ordered Courtsdesk to delete its archive of magistrates' court records within days, citing unauthorized data sharing and data protection concerns. The platform, approved as a pilot in 2021, was used by around 1,500 journalists from 39 media organizations to track court cases and exposed that courts gave no advance notice of 1.6 million criminal hearings.
Why it matters: The deletion will reduce transparency in criminal courts, making it harder for journalists to report on cases of public interest and identify patterns in the justice system. Local reporters with fewer resources will be most affected, potentially allowing serious offenders and important cases to go unreported as the platform revealed court listings were accurate only 4.2 percent of the time.
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35 Articles •
Europe's Ariane 64 Rocket to Make Maiden Launch Thursday
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What's happening: Europe's most powerful Ariane 6 rocket variant, the Ariane 64 with four boosters, launches Thursday from French Guiana carrying 32 Amazon Leo broadband satellites. The mission marks the first commercial flight for Ariane 6 and the debut of its full-power configuration, capable of launching over 20 metric tons to orbit.
Why it matters: This launch advances Amazon's LEO broadband network to expand internet access globally, competing with SpaceX's Starlink constellation. It demonstrates Europe's enhanced heavy-lift capability and independence in space access, with ArianeGroup holding a strong order book of roughly 30 launches including 18 missions for Amazon.
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Frontier Supercomputer Achieves Record 35 Trillion-Point Turbulence Simulation
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The details: Georgia Tech researchers used the Frontier supercomputer at Oak Ridge National Laboratory to run the largest direct numerical simulation of 3D turbulence ever conducted, achieving a record 35 trillion grid points (32,768 points per edge) and a Reynolds number of 2,500. The simulation, published in the Journal of Fluid Mechanics, reveals that small-scale turbulence is more intermittent than previously thought and shows extreme fluctuations organizing into tornado-like structures.
Why it matters: These insights into turbulent fluctuations can lead to more accurate weather forecasting, better prediction of extreme weather events like Category 5 tornadoes, cleaner and safer combustion engines, and more efficient vehicle and airfoil designs. The research team has made the dataset publicly available through the Johns Hopkins Turbulence Database, enabling scientists worldwide to advance turbulence research and improve real-world applications.
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