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VPNs could be driving NSA surveillance, Belarus passes anti-LGBTQ laws
33 Articles •
Belarus Passes Bill to Criminalize 'Promotion of Homosexual Relationships'
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What happened: Belarus' parliament approved legislation yesterday that penalizes promotion of homosexuality, gender transition, childlessness and pedophilia with fines up to 6,750 rubles, community service or 15 days detention. The bill now awaits President Lukashenko's expected signature after passing the lower house last month.
Why it matters: The law mirrors Russian repressive measures and gives authorities legal grounds to target LGBTQ+ individuals in a country where security forces have already conducted at least 12 documented persecutions in three months. Transgender people fear losing access to necessary medicines and legal recognition, with hundreds already requesting help to move abroad.
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73% of sources are Original Reporting
52 Articles •
French General Tells US to 'Stop Snorting Cocaine' Over Iran Uranium Plan
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The plan: The Pentagon briefed President Trump last week on a military operation to seize Iran's roughly 1,000 pounds of 60% enriched uranium by landing troops inside Iran, excavating material from collapsed tunnels, building a temporary runway, and airlifting the nuclear stockpile out. The operation could require hundreds to thousands of troops on the ground for weeks under fire.
Why it matters: Experts call the plan extraordinarily risky and operationally complex, warning it would expose American forces to sustained Iranian attacks during a weeks-long mission never attempted during wartime. The operation comes after Iran rejected Trump's peace proposal and could significantly escalate the ongoing conflict with deployment of up to hundreds of thousands of troops.
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96% of sources are Original Reporting
13 Articles •
Democrats Press Gabbard on Whether VPNs Expose Americans to NSA Spying
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What happened: Six Democratic lawmakers sent a letter Thursday to DNI Tulsi Gabbard demanding public disclosure of whether Americans using commercial VPNs risk being treated as foreigners under surveillance laws. Declassified NSA guidelines presume unknown locations are foreign, potentially subjecting VPN users to warrantless surveillance under Section 702 and Executive Order 12333.
Why it matters: Millions of Americans use VPNs for public Wi-Fi security or accessing region-locked content, following recommendations from the FBI, NSA, and FTC. However, routing traffic through foreign VPN servers may inadvertently strip users of constitutional protections against warrantless surveillance as Section 702 comes up for renewal next month.
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92% of sources are Original Reporting
41 Articles •
China Investigates Third Politburo Member in Widening Purge
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What happened: China's anti-corruption watchdog placed Politburo member Ma Xingrui under investigation Friday for suspected serious violations of discipline and law, though specific allegations remain undisclosed. Ma, 66, served as Xinjiang party secretary from 2021 to 2025 and has been absent from major state events since late October.
Why it matters: This marks the third Politburo member targeted since 2022, shrinking the elite 24-member body to just 21 active members in the widest purge since the Cultural Revolution era. The intensifying crackdown signals Xi Jinping's consolidation of power and enforcement of strict party discipline at the highest levels of Chinese leadership.
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66% of sources are Original Reporting
60 Articles •
Experts Warn AI-Powered Cyberattacks Have Hit a 'Watershed Moment'
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What happened: Anthropic accidentally exposed internal materials this week revealing Claude Mythos, an unreleased AI model the company warns poses unprecedented cybersecurity risks and can exploit software vulnerabilities faster than any existing model. The leak occurred through a misconfigured content management system that left nearly 3,000 draft documents publicly accessible, prompting Anthropic to secure the data Thursday after Fortune reported the breach.
Why it matters: The model can automate large-scale cyberattacks by discovering and exploiting vulnerabilities almost immediately, threatening to outpace human defenders and potentially commoditize existing cybersecurity tools. Cybersecurity stocks plummeted Friday, with major vendors like Palo Alto Networks, CrowdStrike, and Zscaler dropping 4-11% as investors fear AI models could undermine traditional security business models and enable more sophisticated attacks by hackers of any skill level.
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75% of sources are Original Reporting
52 Articles •
US and Israeli Strikes Devastate Iranian Healthcare and Industry
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What happened: The WHO confirmed over 20 attacks on Iranian healthcare facilities since late February, including the destruction of Tehran's century-old Pasteur Institute on March 23 and damage to psychiatric hospitals and pharmaceutical plants. At least 307 health facilities have been damaged, with nine deaths verified by WHO, as part of a wider US-Israeli military campaign that began February 28.
Why it matters: The strikes have crippled Iran's public health infrastructure and shuttered its two largest steel plants, threatening supply chains globally as Iran is the world's 10th largest steel producer. Healthcare facilities are protected under international law, yet 307 medical sites have been damaged, potentially setting a dangerous precedent for civilian protections in armed conflict.
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96% of sources are Original Reporting
171 Articles •
Myanmar Junta Chief Min Aung Hlaing Becomes President
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What happened: Myanmar's junta chief Min Aung Hlaing won a parliamentary vote on Friday to become president, securing 429 of 584 votes in a legislature dominated by the military-backed USDP party and army-appointed lawmakers. The 69-year-old general, who led the 2021 coup against Aung San Suu Kyi's elected government, stepped down as commander-in-chief earlier this week and appointed loyalist Gen. Ye Win Oo as his successor.
Why it matters: The election cements military control over Myanmar and risks intensifying the civil war that has killed nearly 93,000 people and displaced over 3.6 million since the 2021 coup. Resistance groups may face increased military pressure including more air and drone strikes, while the UN estimates more than 16 million people now need life-saving humanitarian assistance amid a worsening fuel crisis and economic collapse.
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64% of sources are High Factuality
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