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Rail sabotage at Olympics; Epstein's connections to Russia; NASA lets iPhones come to space
62 Articles •
Italy Says Railways Hit by 'Serious Sabotage' as Olympics Begin
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What happened: Italian authorities are investigating three suspected deliberate attacks on rail infrastructure near Bologna and Pesaro early Saturday, including fires at track switches, severed speed-detection cables, and a crude explosive device. The incidents caused delays up to two-and-a-half hours and temporarily closed Bologna's high-speed station on the first full day of the Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics.
Why it matters: Thousands of Olympic spectators and regular travelers faced severe disruptions on routes connecting Milan, Venice, and Cortina during the Games' opening weekend. Investigators are examining an anarchist anti-Olympics hypothesis, drawing parallels to similar sabotage that paralyzed France's rail network before the Paris 2024 Games, raising national security concerns.
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84% of sources are Original Reporting
179 Articles •
Canada, France Open Consulates in Greenland
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What happened: Canada and France formally opened consulates in Nuuk yesterday, with Canadian Foreign Minister Anita Anand and Governor General Mary Simon leading ceremonies that included flag-raising and spontaneous singing of the national anthem. France became the first EU country to establish a consulate general in Greenland, appointing Jean-Noel Poirier as consul general.
Why it matters: The diplomatic missions strengthen Arctic cooperation on defense, climate change and economic resilience while signaling allied support for Greenland amid President Trump's recent annexation threats and tariff warnings. The consulates aim to deepen cultural ties between Canadian and Greenlandic Inuit communities and enhance access to critical minerals essential for clean energy technology.
106 Articles •
Epstein Files Reveal Extensive Russian Contacts, Putin Meeting Attempts
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What happened: Newly released US Department of Justice files this week reveal Jeffrey Epstein maintained extensive Russian contacts from 2010-2015, including multiple attempts to arrange meetings with Vladimir Putin and efforts to recruit young Russian women. The documents reference Putin over 1,000 times and Moscow more than 9,000 times, prompting speculation about possible intelligence connections, though no definitive proof has been published.
Why it matters: The revelations have triggered Poland to launch a national security investigation into potential Russian intelligence links, while the Kremlin has dismissed the allegations. The files implicate numerous high-profile figures including Peter Thiel, Steve Bannon, Prince Andrew, and former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak, raising questions about foreign influence operations and potential kompromat targeting Western leaders and business figures.
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74% of sources are Original Reporting
48 Articles •
NASA Now Allowing Astronauts to Bring Their iPhones on Space Missions
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What's happening: NASA is allowing astronauts to carry smartphones—initially iPhones—starting with Crew-12 launching next week to the International Space Station and Artemis II's lunar mission in March. Administrator Jared Isaacman announced the policy shift this week, marking the first time phones have been licensed for NASA spacecraft after accelerated safety reviews.
Why it matters: You'll see more candid photos, videos, and zero-gravity selfies from space as astronauts use modern smartphone cameras instead of decade-old Nikon DSLRs and GoPros. This shift means upcoming missions could become NASA's most well-documented journeys, with crews capturing spontaneous moments to share with families and inspire the public.
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94% of sources are Original Reporting
109 Articles •
US Accuses China of Secret 2020 Nuclear Test, Monitor Finds No Evidence
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What happened: The New START treaty between the US and Russia expired this week, ending caps on the world's two largest nuclear arsenals for the first time in over 50 years. US Under Secretary Thomas DiNanno publicly accused China on Friday of conducting covert nuclear explosive tests, including one on June 22, 2020, with yields in the hundreds of tons, allegedly using decoupling methods to mask seismic detection.
Why it matters: Without formal limits or verification measures, experts fear an unconstrained nuclear arms race as China rapidly expands its arsenal from 600 to an estimated 1,000 warheads by 2030. The US is pushing for a new treaty including China, but Beijing refuses to join until Washington and Moscow reduce their arsenals first, leaving global nuclear stability in unprecedented uncertainty.
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71% of sources are Original Reporting
10 Articles •
China Developing Mini Hypersonic Missiles for Naval Gun
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What happened: Chinese researchers published findings last month on an ultra-small hypersonic missile fired from standard 80mm anti-aircraft guns, reaching Mach 6 speeds with over 20km range. Computer simulations show 99% kill probability against fighter jets and drones at 10,000 meter altitudes, with targets detecting the weapon only 3km away.
Why it matters: This weapon could fundamentally reshape air warfare by compressing response windows to mere seconds and enabling low-cost mass launches that overwhelm defenses. If deployed widely, these gun-launched hypersonics would force major changes to aircraft defense strategies and air-defense systems worldwide.
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100% of sources are Original Reporting
10 Articles •
AIPAC Funnels Dark Money to Three Democratic Candidates in Illinois
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What happened: Two newly formed super PACs launched six-figure television ad buys in January to support three pro-Israel Democratic candidates in Chicago-area House primaries ahead of the March 17 election. Analysis reveals 237 AIPAC donors contributed nearly $825,000 to candidates Melissa Bean and Donna Miller, with many giving identical amounts on the same day, while donor disclosure rules delay transparency until after voters cast ballots.
Why it matters: This coordinated spending strategy allows special interest groups to influence which Democrats represent your district while obscuring their involvement until after you vote. The tactic exploits federal disclosure loopholes that postpone transparency, potentially reshaping Congress and party positions on Israel without voter awareness of who's funding the campaigns.
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21 Articles •
Google Declares Quantum Encryption Threat Already Underway
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What happened: Yesterday, Google's Kent Walker warned that hackers are already harvesting encrypted data today to decrypt later with quantum computers, urging immediate migration to post-quantum cryptography. Google is deploying NIST's ML-KEM standard across its infrastructure in 2026, giving enterprises 12-24 months to transition before current encryption becomes vulnerable.
Why it matters: Your bank transfers, private messages, and sensitive data are being collected now by attackers in 'store now, decrypt later' campaigns. You have roughly 18 months to ensure critical systems adopt quantum-resistant encryption before future quantum computers can break today's security protecting your financial records and communications.
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90% of sources are Original Reporting
15 Articles •
Chinese Researchers Achieve Perovskite Solar Cell Breakthrough
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The breakthrough: Chinese and French researchers achieved a certified 26.74% efficiency in perovskite solar cells using a hindered amine stabilizer that neutralizes damaging superoxide radicals while passivating defects. Unencapsulated devices retained over 95% efficiency after 1,000 hours of continuous light exposure, published in eScience last month.
Why it matters: This dual-action approach combining radical scavenging with defect repair could accelerate commercial perovskite solar panels for homes and buildings, offering high efficiency at lower cost than silicon. The technique works with existing manufacturing processes and ambient fabrication conditions, making large-scale production more feasible.
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87% of sources are Original Reporting
64 Articles •
South Korean Exchange Accidentally Credits $44 Billion in Bitcoin
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What happened: Bithumb mistakenly credited 620,000 bitcoins (worth $44 billion) to 695 customers yesterday during a promotional event that was supposed to award 2,000 won ($1.37) per user. The exchange restricted affected accounts within 35 minutes and recovered 99.7% of the errantly credited bitcoin, while prices normalized within five minutes.
Why it matters: The incident triggered a brief 10-17% price crash on Bithumb and prompted South Korea's financial regulator to convene an emergency meeting, signaling potential tighter controls on cryptocurrency exchanges. Bithumb will compensate affected users who sold at unfavorable prices and is introducing AI detection systems to prevent future errors.
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91% of sources are Original Reporting
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