Daily Briefing
AI breakthroughs drive Iran strikes; Treasure Hunter released from jail; Africa spends big on surveillance tech

34 Articles •
US Military's AI-Powered System Struck 6,000 Targets in Iran as War Enters Third Week
Left 50%
C 23%
Right 27%
What happened: The U.S. military used Anthropic's Claude AI, embedded in Palantir's Maven Smart System, to help strike over 1,000 targets in Iran within the first 24 hours of Operation Epic Fury. Claude generates attack options, routes, and target priorities that human commanders review before authorizing strikes, collapsing what previously required eight to nine separate systems into one decision-support tool.
Why it matters: This AI-powered targeting raises accountability questions when mistakes occur, such as a strike near a girls' school in Minab that killed over 160 people. Despite the Pentagon canceling Anthropic's $200 million contract over ethical concerns, Claude remains essential to current operations because no replacement exists yet, highlighting tensions between rapid military AI adoption and oversight of civilian harm.
94% of sources are Original Reporting

80 Articles •
Meteorite Crashes Through Roof in Koblenz, Germany
L 24%
Center 52%
R 24%
What happened: On Sunday evening around 7 p.m., a meteor several meters wide exploded over western Europe, creating a six-second fireball visible across five countries. Fragments struck multiple buildings in Koblenz, Germany, with one meteorite punching a soccer ball-sized hole through a roof into an unoccupied bedroom.
Why it matters: While no injuries occurred, the event highlights detection gaps for meter-scale space rocks that strike Earth every few weeks to years. Only 11 such objects have ever been spotted before atmospheric entry, and small objects approaching from daytime sky regions are typically missed by telescope surveys.
86% of sources are Original Reporting

45 Articles •
Treasure Hunter Freed After Decade Jailed for Hidden Gold
Left 33%
Center 60%
7%
What happened: Tommy Thompson, 73, who discovered the S.S. Central America shipwreck containing thousands of pounds of gold in 1988, was released from federal prison on March 4 after spending over a decade jailed for refusing to reveal the location of 500 missing gold coins valued at $2.5 million. He was held in contempt since 2015 after becoming a fugitive in 2012 and faces millions in fines from approximately 160 investors who claim they never received proceeds from the $50 million treasure sale.
Why it matters: The case highlights extraordinary limits of contempt detention, as Thompson remained imprisoned far beyond the typical 18-month federal limit, and he still owes over $3.5 million in fines plus $1,000 for each day imprisoned. Hundreds of millions in recovered gold from the historic 1857 shipwreck remain missing, while treasure that has surfaced has fetched record prices at auction, including an $8 million ingot in 2001 and a $2.16 million ingot in 2022.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
80% of sources are High Factuality

9 Articles •
Naples Museum Lets Blind Visitors Touch Veiled Christ Sculpture
Left 60%
Center 40%
What's happening: The Sansevero Chapel Museum in Naples opens Wednesday for a free tactile tour allowing blind and visually impaired visitors to touch Giuseppe Sammartino's 1753 Veiled Christ sculpture and marble bas-reliefs. Visitors must reserve in advance, may bring a companion or guide dog, and must remove jewelry to protect the fragile marble.
Why it matters: This initiative reflects Italy's broader push since 2021 to make cultural sites accessible to people with disabilities, supported by EU recovery funds. Accessible tourism benefits everyone by creating richer sensory experiences and brings economic advantages, as disabled travelers typically bring two or more companions.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting
67% of sources are High Factuality

7 Articles •
Scientists Decode 300-Million-Year-Old DNA Code Hidden in Plant Genomes
Center 100%
The discovery: An international team led by researchers at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Hebrew University, and University of Cambridge mapped 2.3 million conserved regulatory DNA sequences across 284 plant species using a new tool called Conservatory. Published yesterday in Science, the study reveals that over 3,000 regulatory elements predate flowering plants and have remained essential for over 400 million years, solving a decades-long mystery about whether such conservation exists in plants.
Why it matters: These ancient regulatory sequences control when and where plant genes activate, and understanding them could revolutionize agriculture by enabling precision breeding and development of more resilient crops. The newly available Conservatory atlas gives plant breeders a powerful resource to address urgent challenges like drought and food scarcity amid climate change, focusing on fine-tuning gene regulation rather than altering genes themselves.
100% of sources are Original Reporting
71% of sources are High Factuality

18 Articles •
Altman: AI to Become Metered Utility Like Electricity
L 17%
Center 25%
Right 58%
What happened: Two days ago at BlackRock's Infrastructure Summit in Washington DC, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman outlined a vision where AI would be sold like electricity or water, with users paying for monthly token budgets or per-request usage. To support this model, OpenAI is pursuing gigawatt data center campuses and partnering with building trades unions to expand infrastructure.
Why it matters: This shift could fundamentally reshape employment and the economy, with Altman warning that CEOs and top executives will soon be unable to perform their duties without heavy AI assistance by late 2028. Traditional economic metrics like GDP may plummet in a deflationary world, while startups increasingly invest in computing power over human workers, creating 'zero person' companies.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Left Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting

24 Articles •
20% of Australian Teens Still Using TikTok, Snapchat Despite Ban
L 21%
Center 43%
Right 36%
The latest: About 20% of Australians aged 13-15 still use TikTok and Snapchat two months after Australia raised the minimum social media age to 16 in December, despite platforms removing 4.7 million under-16 accounts. Overall usage fell significantly, with Snapchat dropping to 20.3% and TikTok to 21.2% among that age group by February.
Why it matters: The ban's enforcement is pushing platforms toward potentially privacy-intrusive verification methods including facial age estimation and biometric scans, raising concerns about sensitive data collection and surveillance. Australia's approach is becoming a global test case, with Spain, the UK, and Malaysia considering similar restrictions that could reshape how you verify your age online.
Daily Briefing
AI breakthroughs drive Iran strikes; Treasure Hunter released from jail; Africa spends big on surveillance tech


34 Articles •
US Military's AI-Powered System Struck 6,000 Targets in Iran as War Enters Third Week
Left 50%
C 23%
Right 27%
What happened: The U.S. military used Anthropic's Claude AI, embedded in Palantir's Maven Smart System, to help strike over 1,000 targets in Iran within the first 24 hours of Operation Epic Fury. Claude generates attack options, routes, and target priorities that human commanders review before authorizing strikes, collapsing what previously required eight to nine separate systems into one decision-support tool.
Why it matters: This AI-powered targeting raises accountability questions when mistakes occur, such as a strike near a girls' school in Minab that killed over 160 people. Despite the Pentagon canceling Anthropic's $200 million contract over ethical concerns, Claude remains essential to current operations because no replacement exists yet, highlighting tensions between rapid military AI adoption and oversight of civilian harm.
94% of sources are Original Reporting

80 Articles •
Meteorite Crashes Through Roof in Koblenz, Germany
L 24%
Center 52%
R 24%
What happened: On Sunday evening around 7 p.m., a meteor several meters wide exploded over western Europe, creating a six-second fireball visible across five countries. Fragments struck multiple buildings in Koblenz, Germany, with one meteorite punching a soccer ball-sized hole through a roof into an unoccupied bedroom.
Why it matters: While no injuries occurred, the event highlights detection gaps for meter-scale space rocks that strike Earth every few weeks to years. Only 11 such objects have ever been spotted before atmospheric entry, and small objects approaching from daytime sky regions are typically missed by telescope surveys.
86% of sources are Original Reporting

45 Articles •
Treasure Hunter Freed After Decade Jailed for Hidden Gold
Left 33%
Center 60%
7%
What happened: Tommy Thompson, 73, who discovered the S.S. Central America shipwreck containing thousands of pounds of gold in 1988, was released from federal prison on March 4 after spending over a decade jailed for refusing to reveal the location of 500 missing gold coins valued at $2.5 million. He was held in contempt since 2015 after becoming a fugitive in 2012 and faces millions in fines from approximately 160 investors who claim they never received proceeds from the $50 million treasure sale.
Why it matters: The case highlights extraordinary limits of contempt detention, as Thompson remained imprisoned far beyond the typical 18-month federal limit, and he still owes over $3.5 million in fines plus $1,000 for each day imprisoned. Hundreds of millions in recovered gold from the historic 1857 shipwreck remain missing, while treasure that has surfaced has fetched record prices at auction, including an $8 million ingot in 2001 and a $2.16 million ingot in 2022.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
80% of sources are High Factuality

9 Articles •
Naples Museum Lets Blind Visitors Touch Veiled Christ Sculpture
Left 60%
Center 40%
What's happening: The Sansevero Chapel Museum in Naples opens Wednesday for a free tactile tour allowing blind and visually impaired visitors to touch Giuseppe Sammartino's 1753 Veiled Christ sculpture and marble bas-reliefs. Visitors must reserve in advance, may bring a companion or guide dog, and must remove jewelry to protect the fragile marble.
Why it matters: This initiative reflects Italy's broader push since 2021 to make cultural sites accessible to people with disabilities, supported by EU recovery funds. Accessible tourism benefits everyone by creating richer sensory experiences and brings economic advantages, as disabled travelers typically bring two or more companions.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting
67% of sources are High Factuality

7 Articles •
Scientists Decode 300-Million-Year-Old DNA Code Hidden in Plant Genomes
Center 100%
The discovery: An international team led by researchers at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Hebrew University, and University of Cambridge mapped 2.3 million conserved regulatory DNA sequences across 284 plant species using a new tool called Conservatory. Published yesterday in Science, the study reveals that over 3,000 regulatory elements predate flowering plants and have remained essential for over 400 million years, solving a decades-long mystery about whether such conservation exists in plants.
Why it matters: These ancient regulatory sequences control when and where plant genes activate, and understanding them could revolutionize agriculture by enabling precision breeding and development of more resilient crops. The newly available Conservatory atlas gives plant breeders a powerful resource to address urgent challenges like drought and food scarcity amid climate change, focusing on fine-tuning gene regulation rather than altering genes themselves.
100% of sources are Original Reporting
71% of sources are High Factuality

18 Articles •
Altman: AI to Become Metered Utility Like Electricity
L 17%
Center 25%
Right 58%
What happened: Two days ago at BlackRock's Infrastructure Summit in Washington DC, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman outlined a vision where AI would be sold like electricity or water, with users paying for monthly token budgets or per-request usage. To support this model, OpenAI is pursuing gigawatt data center campuses and partnering with building trades unions to expand infrastructure.
Why it matters: This shift could fundamentally reshape employment and the economy, with Altman warning that CEOs and top executives will soon be unable to perform their duties without heavy AI assistance by late 2028. Traditional economic metrics like GDP may plummet in a deflationary world, while startups increasingly invest in computing power over human workers, creating 'zero person' companies.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Left Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting

24 Articles •
20% of Australian Teens Still Using TikTok, Snapchat Despite Ban
L 21%
Center 43%
Right 36%
The latest: About 20% of Australians aged 13-15 still use TikTok and Snapchat two months after Australia raised the minimum social media age to 16 in December, despite platforms removing 4.7 million under-16 accounts. Overall usage fell significantly, with Snapchat dropping to 20.3% and TikTok to 21.2% among that age group by February.
Why it matters: The ban's enforcement is pushing platforms toward potentially privacy-intrusive verification methods including facial age estimation and biometric scans, raising concerns about sensitive data collection and surveillance. Australia's approach is becoming a global test case, with Spain, the UK, and Malaysia considering similar restrictions that could reshape how you verify your age online.