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FBI accuses of retaliation by Kash; Nintendo customers sue over tariffs; Turkey locks down social media.
198 Articles •
Israeli Strike Kills Lebanese Journalist During Fragile Ceasefire
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What happened: Israeli airstrikes in southern Lebanon's al-Tiri village yesterday killed journalist Amal Khalil and wounded photographer Zeinab Faraj. Khalil's body was trapped under rubble for six hours as rescue teams reported being fired upon by Israeli forces, delaying recovery until midnight.
Why it matters: The killing occurred during a 10-day ceasefire set to expire Sunday, raising alarm about press safety and ceasefire violations ahead of today's US-mediated talks in Washington. Nine journalists have now been killed in Lebanon this year, with Lebanon accusing Israel of deliberately targeting media workers.
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62% of sources are Original Reporting
218 Articles •
Head-On Train Collision North of Copenhagen Injures Seventeen
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What happened: Two commuter trains collided head-on early this morning around 6:30 a.m. near Hillerød, 40 kilometers north of Copenhagen, injuring at least 17 people. Five passengers are in critical condition while 12 others sustained minor injuries, with all 38 passengers successfully evacuated from both trains.
Why it matters: The crash occurred on a local rail line heavily used by Gribskov residents, workers, and schoolchildren for their daily commute. Rail services remain suspended while investigators examine signaling systems and track conditions, with delays expected to continue as authorities work to determine what caused two trains to end up on the same track.
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72% of sources are Original Reporting
21 Articles •
UAE-Backed Colombian Mercenaries Aided RSF in Sudan
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What happened: A UN report found Libya's Subul al-Salam Battalion, part of Gen. Khalifa Hifter's forces, facilitated the transfer of Colombian mercenaries, weapons, and fuel from Kufra to Sudan's RSF paramilitaries between October 2024 and February 2026. The battalion provided a rear base 75 kilometers southwest of Kufra, deployed ground escorts in June 2025, and enabled RSF advances including the October 2025 capture of El-Fasher after an 18-month siege.
Why it matters: The mercenary pipeline, tracked through mobile phones and UAE training facilities in Abu Dhabi, enabled drone operations and atrocities in El-Fasher that the ICC assessed as war crimes and crimes against humanity with hallmarks of genocide. The conflict has killed at least 59,000 people and created the world's largest humanitarian crisis, with external support from the UAE and other actors prolonging the three-year war that has displaced millions and triggered famine.
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71% of sources are High Factuality
65 Articles •
NYT: FBI Investigated Reporter Who Covered Patel's Girlfriend
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What happened: The FBI opened an inquiry into New York Times reporter Elizabeth Williamson in March after her Feb. 28 article revealed Director Kash Patel assigned FBI personnel to protect and transport his girlfriend, country singer Alexis Wilkins. Agents interviewed Wilkins, searched federal databases for information on Williamson, and recommended pursuing a preliminary investigation under federal stalking statutes, but the Justice Department blocked further action, determining there was no legal basis to proceed.
Why it matters: The episode raises serious concerns about press freedom and whether routine newsgathering practices could be criminalized under the Trump administration. Justice Department officials viewed the inquiry as possible retaliation for unfavorable reporting, while the scrutiny of taxpayer-funded FBI resources being used for personal purposes intensifies questions about government accountability and the chilling effect on journalism.
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71% of sources are High Factuality
36 Articles •
Nintendo Customers Sue for Share of Trump Tariff Refunds
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What happened: Two customers filed a class-action lawsuit on Tuesday against Nintendo, alleging the company raised prices by $1 to $50 on Switch consoles and accessories between February 2025 and February 2026 to cover tariff costs, then sought federal refunds after the Supreme Court struck down the tariffs in February. The suit claims Nintendo would collect the same tariff payments twice—once from consumers through higher prices and again from the government—constituting unjust enrichment.
Why it matters: If successful, the lawsuit could force Nintendo and other importers to reimburse consumers who paid inflated prices during the tariff period, potentially shifting large sums from a $160 billion federal refund pool back to buyers. The case may set precedent for how tariff refunds are allocated, as similar suits have been filed against Lululemon, Costco, and EssilorLuxottica, though some shippers like FedEx have already promised to return refunds to customers.
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97% of sources are Original Reporting
62 Articles •
Turkey Bans Social Media Access for Children Under 15
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What happened: Turkish parliament passed legislation late Wednesday requiring social media platforms like YouTube, TikTok, Facebook and Instagram to block children under 15 from opening accounts and install age-verification systems. The bill, which follows a week after a 14-year-old killed nine students and a teacher in Kahramanmaras, requires President Erdogan's signature within 15 days and takes effect six months after publication.
Why it matters: If enacted, platforms must implement parental controls and respond to harmful content within one hour during emergencies, with penalties including fines and bandwidth reductions for noncompliance. Turkey joins a global trend alongside Australia, France and Greece to restrict young people's social media access amid concerns over cyberbullying, addiction and online safety, though critics argue the government has used online restrictions to suppress political dissent.
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85% of sources are Original Reporting
154 Articles •
Trump Claims Iran Halted Executions Amid Diplomatic Standoff
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What happened: President Trump claimed yesterday that Iran agreed to halt executions of eight women protesters, with four to be released immediately and four serving one month in prison. Iran's judiciary denied the executions were ever planned, calling Trump's claims fake news and stating some women had already been released or faced non-capital charges.
Why it matters: The dispute unfolds as fragile ceasefire talks between the U.S. and Iran hang in the balance, with negotiations in Pakistan uncertain and a temporary ceasefire set to expire. Questions about whether the women or their images are real, combined with Iran's refusal to negotiate under a U.S. naval blockade, complicate diplomatic efforts to prevent renewed conflict.
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92% of sources are Original Reporting
83 Articles •
Crypto Billionaire Justin Sun Sues Trump Crypto Venture
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What happened: Justin Sun filed a federal lawsuit Tuesday against World Liberty Financial, alleging the Trump-backed crypto firm illegally froze his $320 million in WLFI tokens, threatened to burn them, and engaged in fraud and extortion. Sun invested $45 million in the project and was awarded another billion tokens as an advisor, but claims the relationship soured when he refused additional investments.
Why it matters: The lawsuit raises serious questions about centralized control and investor protections in Trump-backed crypto ventures that have generated over $1 billion for the Trump family. If Sun's allegations prove true, it could expose regulatory violations, harm other early investors locked out of trading until 2030, and signal risks for anyone investing in celebrity-backed crypto projects with hidden control mechanisms.
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83% of sources are Original Reporting
60 Articles •
Google Commits $750M to Agentic AI, Unveils New Chips
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The details: Google announced its eighth-generation TPU will split into two purpose-built chips: the TPU 8t for training and TPU 8i for inference, both targeting TSMC's 2nm process for late 2027 availability. The company also made its seventh-generation Ironwood TPU generally available, delivering 4.6 petaFLOPS per chip and claiming 3x faster training and 80% better performance per dollar than previous generations.
Why it matters: The architectural split addresses conflicting workload demands—training needs maximum compute density while inference requires low latency and cost efficiency—potentially lowering your AI deployment costs as custom chips could capture 45% of the AI market by 2028. Google's $750 million partner fund with firms like Accenture, Deloitte, and PwC aims to make its platform the default choice when enterprises deploy AI agents, directly affecting which tools your organization may adopt.
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93% of sources are Original Reporting
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