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Australia journalism strike over AI; Vatican gives guidance on animal implants
55 Articles •
Ancient DNA Pushes Dog Domestication Back 5,000 Years
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The discovery: Two new genetic studies published today in Nature confirm dogs lived alongside humans as early as 15,800 years ago in Turkey, pushing back confirmed domestication by 5,000 years. Researchers analyzed over 200 ancient canine remains across Europe and southwest Asia, finding dogs were already widespread across western Eurasia by 14,200 years ago during the Paleolithic period, thousands of years before agriculture emerged.
Why it matters: These Paleolithic dogs are direct ancestors of many modern breeds including boxers and salukis, meaning your pet may trace half its ancestry back over 15,000 years. The findings show dogs were deeply integrated into hunter-gatherer societies long before farming, with evidence humans fed them fish, buried puppies alongside people, and treated them with the same care and symbolic importance as family members.
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67% of sources are High Factuality
85 Articles •
Judge Says Pentagon's Anthropic Ban Looks Like Punishment
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What happened: Anthropic sued the Trump administration after the Pentagon designated it a supply chain risk on March 3, the first time a U.S. company received this label typically reserved for foreign adversaries. The dispute arose when Anthropic refused contract terms allowing unrestricted military use of its Claude AI, specifically rejecting mass surveillance of Americans and fully autonomous weapons.
Why it matters: The designation could cost Anthropic billions in lost business and bar major Pentagon contractors like Microsoft, Amazon, and Palantir from using Claude. A ruling expected within days will set precedent for how far the government can restrict AI vendors and could impact defense contracting industry-wide.
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72% of sources are High Factuality
21 Articles •
30+ Bodies Exhumed from Kenya Mass Grave
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What happened: Homicide detectives exhumed 33 bodies—25 children and 8 adults—from a mass grave at Makaburini Cemetery in Kericho yesterday following reports of secret burials. Initial findings indicate 13 unclaimed bodies were transported from Nyamira County Referral Hospital on March 20, though the total count more than doubled during excavation.
Why it matters: The discovery raises urgent questions about how hospitals handle unclaimed bodies and whether proper legal procedures are followed. Senator Cherargei noted that 480 bodies remain unclaimed at Kenyatta National Hospital alone, half of them children, prompting calls for nationwide accountability and transparency in mortuary practices.
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95% of sources are Original Reporting
22 Articles •
Vatican Approves Animal Organ Transplants Under Strict Guidelines
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What happened: Yesterday, the Vatican's Pontifical Academy for Life released an updated 88-page document permitting Catholics to receive animal organs, tissues, or cells under ethical safeguards. The guidance, drafted with international medical experts including Harvard researchers, updates a 2001 position and responds to recent advances like the first pig-to-human kidney transplant in 2024.
Why it matters: With 170,000 transplants performed worldwide in 2024 representing less than 10% of actual demand, xenotransplantation could address the chronic organ shortage that kills 8 people daily in the EU and 13-17 in the US. However, only about 30 patients per year are currently eligible, and it will take at least five years before the procedure becomes widely viable.
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95% of sources are Original Reporting
39 Articles •
Australia: ABC Journalists Strike for First Time in 20 Years
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What happened: More than 2,000 ABC staff walked off the job today at 11am AEDT in a 24-hour strike, the first major industrial action in 20 years. Live programming was replaced with BBC content and reruns after 60% of staff rejected management's 10% pay offer over three years, demanding better wages, job security, AI protections, and an end to rolling contracts.
Why it matters: The strike disrupted flagship news programs including 7.30, Radio National Breakfast, and the 7pm bulletin, forcing Australia's national broadcaster to air BBC content instead of local news. Staff cite below-inflation pay rises (offer at 3.25-3.5% versus 3.8% inflation), widespread use of short-term contracts creating job insecurity, and lack of AI safeguards as critical issues affecting journalism quality.
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85% of sources are Original Reporting
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62% of sources are High Factuality
17 Articles •
China Bars Manus Co-Founders from Leaving Country Amid Meta Deal Review
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What happened: Chinese authorities barred Manus AI co-founders Xiao Hong and Ji Yichao from leaving the country while regulators review whether Meta's roughly $2 billion acquisition violated export-control and foreign-investment rules. The founders were summoned to a meeting at China's National Development and Reform Commission in Beijing last week and questioned about the Singapore-based startup's offshore relocation in mid-2025.
Why it matters: The probe could deepen geopolitical divisions in the global AI industry, creating new hurdles for cross-border acquisitions and talent mobility. Beijing's action signals it will no longer tolerate offshore movement of strategic AI talent and technology, fundamentally reshaping how Chinese founders can relocate startups and forcing a more fractured, politically divided AI ecosystem.
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88% of sources are Original Reporting
26 Articles •
Navy Rushes Mine-Clearing Ships Back to Hormuz
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What happened: The U.S. Navy is expediting maintenance in Singapore for two littoral combat ships, USS Tulsa and USS Santa Barbara, to return them to the Persian Gulf. The ships, spotted in Malaysia this week after port calls, carry mine-countermeasure packages crucial for clearing mines Iran has reportedly deployed in the Strait of Hormuz, which carries one-fifth of global oil shipments.
Why it matters: Over a dozen attacks have nearly halted traffic through the Strait, pushing oil prices above $100 per barrel in what's being called the worst energy supply shock in history. Iran possesses over 5,000 mines and has deployed at least a dozen in the waterway, threatening global oil flows and raising insurance costs for commercial shipping worldwide.
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81% of sources are Original Reporting
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