Daily Briefing
MSG surveillance networks; Iran launcher capacity; Trump teases UFO release

18 Articles •
Madison Square Garden Surveillance Scandal Exposed by WIRED
Left 40%
Center 60%
What happened: A lawsuit filed this week by former MSG security VP Donald Ingrasselino alleges Madison Square Garden has operated a pervasive surveillance program since 2018, using facial recognition to scan 40 people per minute and compile dossiers including Social Security numbers, tax records, and family photos. The system has banned 900-1,500 lawyers whose firms sued MSG, ejected fans who criticized owner James Dolan, and tracked individuals' bathroom visits and social media posts across MSG venues including Radio City Music Hall.
Why it matters: If you attend events at MSG-operated venues, your face is scanned and stored without consent the moment you enter, and you can be banned or ejected even after purchasing tickets if you're flagged for criticizing ownership or working at a firm that sued the company. New York's Attorney General has launched an inquiry citing civil rights concerns, but despite legislative efforts in 2023, no state protections exist to prevent this surveillance from expanding to other venues nationwide.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting

15 Articles •
NYT Publishes Secret Supreme Court Memos on Shadow Docket's Origins
Left 58%
Center 25%
R 17%
What happened: The New York Times published confidential Supreme Court memos from February 2016 showing how justices debated and issued a 5-4 order halting Obama's Clean Power Plan without explanation. The memos, normally sealed until a justice's death, reveal Chief Justice Roberts invoked the major questions doctrine over five days of rapid deliberations.
Why it matters: These documents expose how the Court's shadow docket—emergency orders made without full arguments or written reasoning—now shapes major policies affecting environmental regulations, energy costs, and clean air standards. This secretive process has become increasingly common for politically sensitive cases, limiting transparency and making it harder to understand how decisions affecting your health and utility bills are made.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
80% of sources are Original Reporting

9 Articles •
Posthumous Reproduction Raises Unsettled Legal and Ethical Questions
Left 33%
Center 67%
The latest: A recent study finds European countries are split over allowing posthumous embryo transfers, revealing legal and ethical disagreements across nations.
Why it matters: Conflicting rules could affect patients, fertility clinics and cross-border treatments, raising questions about consent, inheritance and regulatory coordination across Europe.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
89% of sources are Original Reporting

17 Articles •
DRAM and SSD Prices More than Doubled in Q1 2026, Fueling PC Panic Buying
Left 67%
Center 33%
What happened: Global PC shipments grew 3.2% year-over-year to 63.3 million units in Q1 2026 as consumers rushed to buy computers before conditions worsened. DRAM prices surged 110% and SSD prices jumped 113-147% during the quarter, with some memory spot prices increasing nearly ninefold since last fall.
Why it matters: SK Hynix's chairman warns the memory shortage could persist beyond 2028 into 2030, meaning higher prices may continue for years. Major memory suppliers have already sold out production capacity through 2026, with manufacturers prioritizing enterprise customers over consumer products while simultaneously cutting output to protect profits.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting

22 Articles •
Iran Regains 60% of Missile Launchers During Ceasefire, US Intelligence Estimates
Left 29%
7%
Right 64%
What happened: Iran has recovered roughly 60% of its missile launchers since the ceasefire began in early April, restoring more than 100 systems hidden in caves and underground bunkers. U.S. intelligence assessments indicate Tehran retains up to 70% of its prewar missile stockpiles and 40% of its drone arsenal despite weeks of heavy strikes.
Why it matters: Iran retains enough missiles and drones to threaten shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, which could disrupt global oil supplies and maritime trade. With the ceasefire expiring on April 22 and more than a dozen U.S. warships enforcing a blockade that halts $340 million in Iranian trade daily, the risk of renewed escalation remains high.
91% of sources are Original Reporting

105 Articles •
Trump Teases Imminent UFO Document Releases
Left 31%
C 24%
Right 45%
What happened: President Trump announced Friday that his administration has reviewed classified UFO documents and will release the first batch very soon, following his February directive to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna requested 46 specific UAP videos by April 14, a deadline the Pentagon missed, though officials say they are consolidating records across agencies.
Why it matters: The files reportedly include unusual objects recorded by military platforms over sensitive areas including U.S. bases, airports, and war zones, raising national security concerns about unidentified phenomena in restricted airspace. The Pentagon has investigated over 510 UAP reports as of 2022, with most remaining unexplained despite no evidence of extraterrestrial technology found.
79% of sources are Original Reporting

6 Articles •
Stanford Economist Argues U.S. is in a 'Second Gilded Age'
Left 25%
Center 50%
Right 25%
What's happening: The U.S. faces growing inequality as monopoly power and AI advantages concentrate wealth among asset owners rather than workers. Since 1980, monopoly capital gains totaled $25.1 trillion—over half of all U.S. stock value in 2019—while workers' wages have stagnated at 1978 purchasing power levels.
Why it matters: Nearly half of American renters now spend over 30% of income on housing—a record high—forcing impossible choices between rent and groceries. BlackRock CEO Larry Fink warned last month that AI could worsen inequality as companies with data and capital capture disproportionate gains while technological displacement compresses decades of change into years.
100% of sources are Original Reporting
67% of sources are High Factuality
Daily Briefing
MSG surveillance networks; Iran launcher capacity; Trump teases UFO release


18 Articles •
Madison Square Garden Surveillance Scandal Exposed by WIRED
Left 40%
Center 60%
What happened: A lawsuit filed this week by former MSG security VP Donald Ingrasselino alleges Madison Square Garden has operated a pervasive surveillance program since 2018, using facial recognition to scan 40 people per minute and compile dossiers including Social Security numbers, tax records, and family photos. The system has banned 900-1,500 lawyers whose firms sued MSG, ejected fans who criticized owner James Dolan, and tracked individuals' bathroom visits and social media posts across MSG venues including Radio City Music Hall.
Why it matters: If you attend events at MSG-operated venues, your face is scanned and stored without consent the moment you enter, and you can be banned or ejected even after purchasing tickets if you're flagged for criticizing ownership or working at a firm that sued the company. New York's Attorney General has launched an inquiry citing civil rights concerns, but despite legislative efforts in 2023, no state protections exist to prevent this surveillance from expanding to other venues nationwide.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting

15 Articles •
NYT Publishes Secret Supreme Court Memos on Shadow Docket's Origins
Left 58%
Center 25%
R 17%
What happened: The New York Times published confidential Supreme Court memos from February 2016 showing how justices debated and issued a 5-4 order halting Obama's Clean Power Plan without explanation. The memos, normally sealed until a justice's death, reveal Chief Justice Roberts invoked the major questions doctrine over five days of rapid deliberations.
Why it matters: These documents expose how the Court's shadow docket—emergency orders made without full arguments or written reasoning—now shapes major policies affecting environmental regulations, energy costs, and clean air standards. This secretive process has become increasingly common for politically sensitive cases, limiting transparency and making it harder to understand how decisions affecting your health and utility bills are made.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
80% of sources are Original Reporting

9 Articles •
Posthumous Reproduction Raises Unsettled Legal and Ethical Questions
Left 33%
Center 67%
The latest: A recent study finds European countries are split over allowing posthumous embryo transfers, revealing legal and ethical disagreements across nations.
Why it matters: Conflicting rules could affect patients, fertility clinics and cross-border treatments, raising questions about consent, inheritance and regulatory coordination across Europe.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
89% of sources are Original Reporting

17 Articles •
DRAM and SSD Prices More than Doubled in Q1 2026, Fueling PC Panic Buying
Left 67%
Center 33%
What happened: Global PC shipments grew 3.2% year-over-year to 63.3 million units in Q1 2026 as consumers rushed to buy computers before conditions worsened. DRAM prices surged 110% and SSD prices jumped 113-147% during the quarter, with some memory spot prices increasing nearly ninefold since last fall.
Why it matters: SK Hynix's chairman warns the memory shortage could persist beyond 2028 into 2030, meaning higher prices may continue for years. Major memory suppliers have already sold out production capacity through 2026, with manufacturers prioritizing enterprise customers over consumer products while simultaneously cutting output to protect profits.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting

22 Articles •
Iran Regains 60% of Missile Launchers During Ceasefire, US Intelligence Estimates
Left 29%
7%
Right 64%
What happened: Iran has recovered roughly 60% of its missile launchers since the ceasefire began in early April, restoring more than 100 systems hidden in caves and underground bunkers. U.S. intelligence assessments indicate Tehran retains up to 70% of its prewar missile stockpiles and 40% of its drone arsenal despite weeks of heavy strikes.
Why it matters: Iran retains enough missiles and drones to threaten shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, which could disrupt global oil supplies and maritime trade. With the ceasefire expiring on April 22 and more than a dozen U.S. warships enforcing a blockade that halts $340 million in Iranian trade daily, the risk of renewed escalation remains high.
91% of sources are Original Reporting

105 Articles •
Trump Teases Imminent UFO Document Releases
Left 31%
C 24%
Right 45%
What happened: President Trump announced Friday that his administration has reviewed classified UFO documents and will release the first batch very soon, following his February directive to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna requested 46 specific UAP videos by April 14, a deadline the Pentagon missed, though officials say they are consolidating records across agencies.
Why it matters: The files reportedly include unusual objects recorded by military platforms over sensitive areas including U.S. bases, airports, and war zones, raising national security concerns about unidentified phenomena in restricted airspace. The Pentagon has investigated over 510 UAP reports as of 2022, with most remaining unexplained despite no evidence of extraterrestrial technology found.
79% of sources are Original Reporting

6 Articles •
Stanford Economist Argues U.S. is in a 'Second Gilded Age'
Left 25%
Center 50%
Right 25%
What's happening: The U.S. faces growing inequality as monopoly power and AI advantages concentrate wealth among asset owners rather than workers. Since 1980, monopoly capital gains totaled $25.1 trillion—over half of all U.S. stock value in 2019—while workers' wages have stagnated at 1978 purchasing power levels.
Why it matters: Nearly half of American renters now spend over 30% of income on housing—a record high—forcing impossible choices between rent and groceries. BlackRock CEO Larry Fink warned last month that AI could worsen inequality as companies with data and capital capture disproportionate gains while technological displacement compresses decades of change into years.
100% of sources are Original Reporting
67% of sources are High Factuality