Daily Briefing
China's assets threatened in Venezuela;; Europe races to arm itself; Spider Monkey wisdom of the crowds

11 Articles •
NASA Completes First Nuclear Propulsion Tests Since 1960s
Center 100%
What happened: NASA completed over 100 cold-flow tests from July to September last year on a full-scale, drum-sized nuclear reactor prototype at Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama, the first such tests since the 1960s. The tests validated fluid dynamics and proved the design resists destructive vibrations, advancing nuclear thermal propulsion systems that could cut Mars transit times nearly in half.
Why it matters: Nuclear thermal propulsion could reduce your journey to Mars from seven to eight months down to potentially four months or less, cutting astronaut radiation exposure by 25 percent and enabling safer abort-to-Earth options. The technology promises heavier payloads, more onboard power for communications and science, and expanded mission windows that don't depend on narrow planetary alignments.
91% of sources are Original Reporting

15 Articles •
Over 50 Million in West Africa Face Acute Hunger by Summer, UN Warns
Left 100%
The numbers: The UN warns 52.8 million people in West Africa will face acute food insecurity this year, part of a global crisis affecting 318 million people. WFP's 2026 budget is projected at under half its required $13 billion, limiting reach to 110 million people.
What it means: Funding shortfalls are forcing humanitarian agencies to cut food rations at a time of surging needs, while climate-driven crop losses continue driving up food prices. The crisis threatens global economic stability and will make food increasingly difficult to afford.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
87% of sources are Original Reporting

14 Articles •
Webb Telescope May Have Found Birthplaces of Massive Black Holes
Left 44%
Center 56%
The discovery: James Webb Space Telescope has identified hundreds of mysterious compact 'Little Red Dots' in the early universe that appear to be Direct Collapse Black Holes forming from primordial gas clouds. These objects, appearing within the first billion years after the Big Bang, could explain how supermassive black holes grew so rapidly in the infant universe.
Why it matters: This discovery reshapes our understanding of how the universe's first supermassive black holes formed, solving the puzzle of how billion-solar-mass black holes appeared just 500 million years after the Big Bang. The findings reveal a previously unknown pathway for black hole formation that bypasses the need for stellar collapse and billions of years of mergers.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
93% of sources are Original Reporting
64% of sources are High Factuality

146 Articles •
Russia-Ukraine War Casualties Near 2 Million, CSIS Study Finds
Left 31%
Center 43%
Right 26%
The numbers: A CSIS study released yesterday reports combined Russian and Ukrainian military casualties have reached roughly 1.8 million through December, with approximately 1.2 million Russian and 500,000-600,000 Ukrainian troops killed, wounded, or missing. The total could hit two million by this spring, marking the highest major power casualties since World War II.
What it means: The staggering casualty toll reflects Russia's declining status as a major power, with its war economy under mounting strain, manufacturing declining, and growth slowing to 0.6% in 2025. Despite heavy losses, Russia advances remarkably slowly—just 50 to 230 feet daily in some areas—while maintaining troop levels through unprecedented drafts and recruiting prisoners.
71% of sources are Original Reporting

18 Articles •
Lunai Bioworks Launches AI Tool to Block Chemical Weapon Design
L 13%
Center 75%
12%
What happened: Lunai Bioworks launched a new artificial intelligence tool designed to identify and block attempts to design chemical weapons. The technology aims to prevent misuse of AI systems in creating dangerous biological or chemical agents.
Why it matters: This development addresses growing concerns about AI being exploited for harmful purposes, offering safeguards as artificial intelligence becomes more accessible. The tool represents an important step in responsible AI development and biosecurity protection.
78% of sources are Original Reporting

14 Articles •
Australian Team Finds Earth-Sized Planet Candidate in Frozen Habitable Zone
Left 60%
C 20%
R 20%
The discovery: Researchers from the University of Southern Queensland led an international team that identified HD 137010 b, an Earth-sized rocky planet candidate orbiting a Sun-like star 146 light-years away. The planet, detected from a single transit in 2017 Kepler data and published this week, is roughly 6% larger than Earth with a year-long orbit but receives less than one-third Earth's heat, resulting in estimated surface temperatures near -68°C.
Why it matters: If confirmed through follow-up observations by TESS or CHEOPS, HD 137010 b would be the first Earth-sized planet with Earth-like orbital properties transiting a nearby bright Sun-like star, enabling meaningful atmospheric studies. The planet has roughly 50-50 odds of falling within the habitable zone, and while likely frozen, could potentially support liquid water with a thick carbon dioxide atmosphere, expanding our understanding of where life might exist.
86% of sources are Original Reporting
Daily Briefing
China's assets threatened in Venezuela;; Europe races to arm itself; Spider Monkey wisdom of the crowds


11 Articles •
NASA Completes First Nuclear Propulsion Tests Since 1960s
Center 100%
What happened: NASA completed over 100 cold-flow tests from July to September last year on a full-scale, drum-sized nuclear reactor prototype at Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama, the first such tests since the 1960s. The tests validated fluid dynamics and proved the design resists destructive vibrations, advancing nuclear thermal propulsion systems that could cut Mars transit times nearly in half.
Why it matters: Nuclear thermal propulsion could reduce your journey to Mars from seven to eight months down to potentially four months or less, cutting astronaut radiation exposure by 25 percent and enabling safer abort-to-Earth options. The technology promises heavier payloads, more onboard power for communications and science, and expanded mission windows that don't depend on narrow planetary alignments.
91% of sources are Original Reporting

15 Articles •
Over 50 Million in West Africa Face Acute Hunger by Summer, UN Warns
Left 100%
The numbers: The UN warns 52.8 million people in West Africa will face acute food insecurity this year, part of a global crisis affecting 318 million people. WFP's 2026 budget is projected at under half its required $13 billion, limiting reach to 110 million people.
What it means: Funding shortfalls are forcing humanitarian agencies to cut food rations at a time of surging needs, while climate-driven crop losses continue driving up food prices. The crisis threatens global economic stability and will make food increasingly difficult to afford.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
87% of sources are Original Reporting

14 Articles •
Webb Telescope May Have Found Birthplaces of Massive Black Holes
Left 44%
Center 56%
The discovery: James Webb Space Telescope has identified hundreds of mysterious compact 'Little Red Dots' in the early universe that appear to be Direct Collapse Black Holes forming from primordial gas clouds. These objects, appearing within the first billion years after the Big Bang, could explain how supermassive black holes grew so rapidly in the infant universe.
Why it matters: This discovery reshapes our understanding of how the universe's first supermassive black holes formed, solving the puzzle of how billion-solar-mass black holes appeared just 500 million years after the Big Bang. The findings reveal a previously unknown pathway for black hole formation that bypasses the need for stellar collapse and billions of years of mergers.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
93% of sources are Original Reporting
64% of sources are High Factuality

146 Articles •
Russia-Ukraine War Casualties Near 2 Million, CSIS Study Finds
Left 31%
Center 43%
Right 26%
The numbers: A CSIS study released yesterday reports combined Russian and Ukrainian military casualties have reached roughly 1.8 million through December, with approximately 1.2 million Russian and 500,000-600,000 Ukrainian troops killed, wounded, or missing. The total could hit two million by this spring, marking the highest major power casualties since World War II.
What it means: The staggering casualty toll reflects Russia's declining status as a major power, with its war economy under mounting strain, manufacturing declining, and growth slowing to 0.6% in 2025. Despite heavy losses, Russia advances remarkably slowly—just 50 to 230 feet daily in some areas—while maintaining troop levels through unprecedented drafts and recruiting prisoners.
71% of sources are Original Reporting

18 Articles •
Lunai Bioworks Launches AI Tool to Block Chemical Weapon Design
L 13%
Center 75%
12%
What happened: Lunai Bioworks launched a new artificial intelligence tool designed to identify and block attempts to design chemical weapons. The technology aims to prevent misuse of AI systems in creating dangerous biological or chemical agents.
Why it matters: This development addresses growing concerns about AI being exploited for harmful purposes, offering safeguards as artificial intelligence becomes more accessible. The tool represents an important step in responsible AI development and biosecurity protection.
78% of sources are Original Reporting

14 Articles •
Australian Team Finds Earth-Sized Planet Candidate in Frozen Habitable Zone
Left 60%
C 20%
R 20%
The discovery: Researchers from the University of Southern Queensland led an international team that identified HD 137010 b, an Earth-sized rocky planet candidate orbiting a Sun-like star 146 light-years away. The planet, detected from a single transit in 2017 Kepler data and published this week, is roughly 6% larger than Earth with a year-long orbit but receives less than one-third Earth's heat, resulting in estimated surface temperatures near -68°C.
Why it matters: If confirmed through follow-up observations by TESS or CHEOPS, HD 137010 b would be the first Earth-sized planet with Earth-like orbital properties transiting a nearby bright Sun-like star, enabling meaningful atmospheric studies. The planet has roughly 50-50 odds of falling within the habitable zone, and while likely frozen, could potentially support liquid water with a thick carbon dioxide atmosphere, expanding our understanding of where life might exist.
86% of sources are Original Reporting