Skip to main content
See every side of every news story
Daily Briefing
Hackers shutdown college finals nationwide; WHO says Hantavirus not quite Covid; Attenborough turns 100
281 Articles •
Hackers Breach Canvas Platform Affecting Millions During Finals
L 23%
Center 68%
9%
What happened: Cybercriminal group ShinyHunters breached Instructure's Canvas learning platform in late April, claiming access to data from 275 million users at nearly 9,000 schools worldwide. The hackers posted ransom messages visible to students, temporarily knocked Canvas offline on May 4, and threatened to leak stolen names, email addresses, student IDs, and private messages unless contacted by May 12.
Why it matters: The breach hit during finals week at many institutions, disrupting coursework for millions of students and faculty who rely on Canvas for assignments, grades, and messaging. While passwords and Social Security numbers weren't compromised, exposed email addresses and student IDs create phishing risks, prompting schools to urge families to watch for suspicious communications and scam attempts.
Blindspot LogoBlindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
Shield Badge SVG Icon
78% of sources are Original Reporting
Seal Check SVG Icon
64% of sources are High Factuality
88 Articles •
WHO on Hantavirus Outbreak: 'This Is Not COVID'
Left 32%
Center 42%
Right 26%
What happened: Three passengers died and five cases were confirmed after hantavirus spread aboard the Dutch cruise ship MV Hondius, which departed Argentina on April 1 with nearly 150 people from 23 countries. The rare Andes strain likely spread person-to-person in the confined setting after initial rodent exposure, prompting international contact tracing across a dozen countries including the US.
Why it matters: WHO officials stress this poses low global risk and differs sharply from COVID-19, as hantavirus requires close, prolonged contact to spread and is not airborne. Passengers who disembarked at St. Helena and other stops are being monitored for symptoms over a six-week incubation period, with US health officials in California, Georgia and Arizona tracking returning residents.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
70% of sources are Original Reporting
66 Articles •
French Prosecutors Seek Charges Against Elon Musk and X over Child Sexual Abuse Images
Left 34%
Center 34%
Right 32%
What happened: Paris prosecutors opened a criminal investigation in January 2025 into X and are now seeking charges against Elon Musk, former CEO Linda Yaccarino, and related companies for alleged complicity in distributing child sexual abuse images, non-consensual deepfakes generated by AI chatbot Grok, Holocaust denial content, and unlawful data handling. Musk and Yaccarino were summoned for questioning last month but did not appear.
Why it matters: This case could reshape how social platforms moderate AI-generated content and handle user safety, with potential criminal liability for platform owners. French prosecutors alerted U.S. regulators in March, suggesting the Grok controversy may have been orchestrated to artificially inflate X and xAI's value, raising concerns about market manipulation and cross-border tech accountability.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
77% of sources are Original Reporting
20 Articles •
Florida Launches Conservative Alternative to AP US History
Left 25%
Center 50%
Right 25%
The details: Florida unveiled its FACT US History course framework on May 4 as a state-designed alternative to AP US History, launching as a pilot this fall. Students who pass the assessment can earn college credit at Florida public institutions, though out-of-state acceptance remains uncertain.
What it means: If you're a Florida student, this course offers an alternative path to college credit within state universities, but colleges outside Florida may not accept it. The 214-page framework emphasizes patriotic themes and excludes critical race theory, contrasting sharply with AP's 560-page approach.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
85% of sources are Original Reporting
Seal Check SVG Icon
65% of sources are High Factuality
47 Articles •
North Korea Deploys Long Range Artillery Threatening Seoul
L 20%
Center 40%
Right 40%
What happened: North Korea plans to deploy new 155mm self-propelled howitzers with a striking range exceeding 60 kilometers along its southern border by year's end, capable of reaching Seoul's 10 million residents. Kim Jong-un also inspected the 5,000-ton destroyer Choe Hyon this week, ordering its handover to the navy by mid-June.
Why it matters: The new artillery systems place Seoul and surrounding areas—home to roughly half of South Korea's population—within direct striking range from North Korean border positions. This deployment escalates conventional military threats on the peninsula amid stalled diplomacy and Kim's declaration of South Korea as a permanent enemy following constitutional changes dropping reunification language.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
64% of sources are Original Reporting
116 Articles •
Shell Reports Nearly Seven Billion Dollar Profit Surge
Left 27%
Center 46%
Right 27%
The numbers: Shell posted adjusted earnings of $6.92 billion in the first quarter of 2026, more than double the previous quarter and 24% higher than last year, beating analyst expectations of $6.1 billion. The surge came despite a 4% drop in oil and gas production, driven by soaring crude prices that reached $126 per barrel and exceptional trading profits linked to Middle East war disruptions.
What it means: U.S. gas prices averaged $4.56 per gallon this week, with oil costs representing 51% of pump prices, as the Iran war disrupted roughly 20% of global oil supplies through the Strait of Hormuz. Shell expects second-quarter production to fall further and warns fuel shortages could hit some countries this summer, while the company raised its dividend 5% but cut share buybacks to $3 billion from $3.5 billion.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
73% of sources are Original Reporting
40 Articles •
Federal Judge Blocks DOGE Grant Cuts Made Using ChatGPT
Left 42%
Center 39%
R 19%
What happened: U.S. District Judge Colleen McMahon ruled this week that DOGE's cancellation of over 1,400 National Endowment for the Humanities grants worth more than $100 million was unconstitutional and unlawful. Two DOGE staffers in their 20s, Justin Fox and Nathan Cavanaugh, used ChatGPT to flag grants containing keywords like DEI, LGBTQ, history, and culture for termination without individualized review, violating First and Fifth Amendment rights.
Why it matters: The ruling restores legal protection to grants supporting scholars, museums, libraries, and public humanities programs nationwide, preventing executive overreach of congressional spending authority. It establishes a critical precedent requiring human oversight when AI systems make consequential federal funding decisions, protecting against automated discrimination based on viewpoint or protected characteristics like race, gender, and religion.
Seal Check SVG Icon
80% of sources are High Factuality
302 Articles •
David Attenborough Celebrates 100 Years Inspiring Conservation
Left 33%
Center 53%
R 14%
The milestone: Sir David Attenborough turns 100 on Friday, May 8, marking seven decades as the world's most recognized nature broadcaster. Britain celebrates with special BBC broadcasts, a Royal Albert Hall concert, museum events, nature walks, and tributes including a giant sand portrait and a newly named parasitic wasp species.
Why it matters: Attenborough's documentaries have shaped how hundreds of millions understand nature and conservation, inspiring policy changes like plastic reduction measures and ocean protection goals. His recent work highlighting climate crisis and biodiversity loss demonstrates that storytelling, not just scientific data, drives the public action needed to protect our planet.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
65% of sources are Original Reporting
News
Feed Dots Icon
For You
Search Icon
Search
Blindspot LogoBlindspotLocal