Daily Briefing
Megatsunami caused by Glacier retreat; North Korea claims exemption from non-proliferation; Chrome sneaks a model on to your device

35 Articles • 7 hours ago
CIA Says Iran Can Withstand U.S. Blockade for Months, WaPo Reports
Left 39%
C 23%
Right 38%
The assessment: A classified CIA analysis delivered this week concludes Iran can withstand the U.S. naval blockade for 90 to 120 days and retains roughly 70-75 percent of its prewar missile stockpiles and launchers, contradicting President Trump's public claims that Iran's arsenal is decimated to only 18-19 percent.
Why it matters: The intelligence finding undermines administration claims that Iran is near collapse and could affect U.S. policy decisions, negotiation timelines, and global oil markets through the Strait of Hormuz, which Iran has effectively closed since the war began in late February.
94% of sources are Original Reporting

23 Articles • 10 hours ago
French Academic Accused of Fraud After Awarding Himself Nobel-Like Award
Left 44%
C 19%
Right 37%
What happened: Florent Montaclair, 56, allegedly created a fake International Society of Philology and its Gold Medal award in 2015, then awarded it to himself at a 2016 Paris ceremony attended by ministers and Nobel laureates. Romanian journalists exposed the fraud in 2019 after he named a Romanian philologist as the next recipient, leading to his indefinite suspension from Marie & Louis Pasteur University and criminal investigation by Montbéliard prosecutors.
Why it matters: The case highlights vulnerabilities in academic credential verification systems and raises questions about trust in scholarly honors. Prosecutors are investigating whether the fabricated prize illegally boosted Montaclair's career under charges including forgery, fraud, and unlawful assumption of title, with potential outcomes including criminal penalties and withdrawal of his professorial title.
96% of sources are Original Reporting
61% of sources are High Factuality

10 Articles • 3 hours ago
RSF Leader Vows Decades-Long War Against Sudanese Army
Left 67%
C 17%
R 16%
What happened: RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo told officers Wednesday his forces are prepared to fight Sudan's army for decades, claiming the RSF has grown from 143,000 to 450,000 fighters since the war began in April 2023. His remarks came a day after Sudan accused Ethiopia and the UAE of launching drone strikes from Ethiopian territory since March, including attacks on Khartoum and its airport.
Why it matters: The ongoing civil war has created what the UN calls the world's largest displacement and hunger crisis, with 13 million people displaced, tens of thousands killed, and famine conditions spreading. Drone attacks have escalated dramatically, killing nearly 700 civilians since January alone, while fighting now rages across multiple fronts including near the Ethiopian border.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting

55 Articles • 17 hours ago
Chrome Automatically Downloads 4GB AI Model Without User Consent
Left 33%
Center 54%
R 13%
What happened: Google Chrome has been automatically downloading Gemini Nano, a roughly 4GB on-device AI model, into users' devices without explicit consent or clear notification. The file, stored as weights.bin in the OptGuideOnDeviceModel folder, powers features like writing assistance and scam detection but will re-download after manual deletion unless on-device AI is disabled in settings.
Why it matters: The silent 4GB download may violate EU privacy laws like GDPR by storing data without consent, consumes significant storage and bandwidth on your device, and could generate 30,000 tonnes of CO2 emissions if deployed to 500 million devices. Privacy researcher Alexander Hanff has raised legal concerns, while Google defends the practice as central to security features and notes Chrome will auto-delete the model if storage runs low.
95% of sources are Original Reporting

171 Articles • 18 hours ago
Israel Strikes Beirut for First Time Since Ceasefire
Left 35%
Center 32%
Right 33%
What happened: Israel struck Beirut's southern suburbs yesterday evening, claiming it killed Hezbollah's Radwan Force commander Malek Balout, his deputy, and others. This marks the first Israeli attack on Dahieh since the April 17 ceasefire, which Prime Minister Netanyahu and Defense Minister Katz said was coordinated with the United States.
Why it matters: The strike threatens the fragile ceasefire and broader US-Iran peace efforts, coming amid daily violations by both sides since April 17. Over 2,700 people have died in Lebanon since fighting began March 2, with more than 120 killed in the past week alone, including women and children.
82% of sources are Original Reporting

38 Articles • 16 hours ago
North Korea Declares It Will Not Follow Nuclear Treaty
L 21%
Center 33%
Right 46%
What happened: North Korea's UN ambassador Kim Song declared Thursday that his country is not bound by the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty under any circumstances, stating its nuclear status is enshrined in its constitution. The statement came during the 11th NPT Review Conference at UN headquarters in New York, which began April 27 and runs through May.
Why it matters: North Korea's explicit rejection of the NPT undermines global non-proliferation efforts and complicates diplomatic attempts to curb nuclear weapons spread. The country is believed to possess dozens of nuclear warheads and may produce enough material for 10 to 20 additional weapons annually, directly affecting regional security and upcoming US-China summit discussions next week.
76% of sources are Original Reporting

32 Articles • 17 hours ago
Ancient Arizona Geoglyph Destroyed During Border Wall Construction
Left 70%
C 20%
10%
What happened: On April 23, construction crews working on a federal border wall project bulldozed through the Las Playas Intaglio, a 1,000-year-old fish-shaped geoglyph in Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge. Heavy machinery destroyed roughly 60 to 70 feet of the 200-foot sacred site, despite it being documented, surveyed since 2002, and marked with protective stakes.
Why it matters: The destruction occurred because Department of Homeland Security waivers allowed contractors to bypass environmental and cultural protection laws that normally safeguard archaeological sites. This raises urgent concerns that other sacred sites along the border, including Quitobaquito Springs and Native American burial grounds, face similar threats as the administration builds three miles of wall weekly under its $46.5 billion expansion program.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
91% of sources are Original Reporting

108 Articles • 18 hours ago
US Antisemitic Incidents Drop 33% But Deadly Assaults Rise
Left 28%
Center 54%
R 18%
The numbers: The ADL recorded 6,274 antisemitic incidents in 2025, down 33% from a record 9,354 in 2024, driven by a 66% drop in campus incidents. However, physical assaults rose to a record 203 cases, and three people were killed in antisemitic attacks—the first Jewish fatalities on US soil since 2019.
Why it matters: Despite the overall decline, at least 300 people were assaulted and assaults with deadly weapons jumped 39%. The ADL is urging expanded security funding for synagogues and schools, while experts warn that 74% of Jewish victims don't report incidents and 57% now view antisemitism as a normal experience.
78% of sources are High Factuality

90 Articles • 18 hours ago
Alaska Megatsunami Ranks Second Largest Ever Recorded
Left 39%
Center 48%
R 13%
What happened: Last August, 64 million cubic metres of rock collapsed into Tracy Arm fjord near Juneau, generating a 481-metre tsunami—the second-highest ever recorded. The wave stripped vegetation up to 55 kilometres away, and while several people were in the area, no deaths were reported.
Why it matters: Climate-driven glacier retreat is destabilizing slopes across Alaska's fjords, creating growing tsunami risks in areas visited by up to six cruise ships daily carrying 6,000 passengers each. Multiple cruise lines have already stopped visiting Tracy Arm, and scientists warn Alaska lacks adequate landslide monitoring systems to detect future collapses.
76% of sources are Original Reporting
Daily Briefing
Megatsunami caused by Glacier retreat; North Korea claims exemption from non-proliferation; Chrome sneaks a model on to your device


35 Articles • 7 hours ago
CIA Says Iran Can Withstand U.S. Blockade for Months, WaPo Reports
Left 39%
C 23%
Right 38%
The assessment: A classified CIA analysis delivered this week concludes Iran can withstand the U.S. naval blockade for 90 to 120 days and retains roughly 70-75 percent of its prewar missile stockpiles and launchers, contradicting President Trump's public claims that Iran's arsenal is decimated to only 18-19 percent.
Why it matters: The intelligence finding undermines administration claims that Iran is near collapse and could affect U.S. policy decisions, negotiation timelines, and global oil markets through the Strait of Hormuz, which Iran has effectively closed since the war began in late February.
94% of sources are Original Reporting

23 Articles • 10 hours ago
French Academic Accused of Fraud After Awarding Himself Nobel-Like Award
Left 44%
C 19%
Right 37%
What happened: Florent Montaclair, 56, allegedly created a fake International Society of Philology and its Gold Medal award in 2015, then awarded it to himself at a 2016 Paris ceremony attended by ministers and Nobel laureates. Romanian journalists exposed the fraud in 2019 after he named a Romanian philologist as the next recipient, leading to his indefinite suspension from Marie & Louis Pasteur University and criminal investigation by Montbéliard prosecutors.
Why it matters: The case highlights vulnerabilities in academic credential verification systems and raises questions about trust in scholarly honors. Prosecutors are investigating whether the fabricated prize illegally boosted Montaclair's career under charges including forgery, fraud, and unlawful assumption of title, with potential outcomes including criminal penalties and withdrawal of his professorial title.
96% of sources are Original Reporting
61% of sources are High Factuality

10 Articles • 3 hours ago
RSF Leader Vows Decades-Long War Against Sudanese Army
Left 67%
C 17%
R 16%
What happened: RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo told officers Wednesday his forces are prepared to fight Sudan's army for decades, claiming the RSF has grown from 143,000 to 450,000 fighters since the war began in April 2023. His remarks came a day after Sudan accused Ethiopia and the UAE of launching drone strikes from Ethiopian territory since March, including attacks on Khartoum and its airport.
Why it matters: The ongoing civil war has created what the UN calls the world's largest displacement and hunger crisis, with 13 million people displaced, tens of thousands killed, and famine conditions spreading. Drone attacks have escalated dramatically, killing nearly 700 civilians since January alone, while fighting now rages across multiple fronts including near the Ethiopian border.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting

55 Articles • 17 hours ago
Chrome Automatically Downloads 4GB AI Model Without User Consent
Left 33%
Center 54%
R 13%
What happened: Google Chrome has been automatically downloading Gemini Nano, a roughly 4GB on-device AI model, into users' devices without explicit consent or clear notification. The file, stored as weights.bin in the OptGuideOnDeviceModel folder, powers features like writing assistance and scam detection but will re-download after manual deletion unless on-device AI is disabled in settings.
Why it matters: The silent 4GB download may violate EU privacy laws like GDPR by storing data without consent, consumes significant storage and bandwidth on your device, and could generate 30,000 tonnes of CO2 emissions if deployed to 500 million devices. Privacy researcher Alexander Hanff has raised legal concerns, while Google defends the practice as central to security features and notes Chrome will auto-delete the model if storage runs low.
95% of sources are Original Reporting

171 Articles • 18 hours ago
Israel Strikes Beirut for First Time Since Ceasefire
Left 35%
Center 32%
Right 33%
What happened: Israel struck Beirut's southern suburbs yesterday evening, claiming it killed Hezbollah's Radwan Force commander Malek Balout, his deputy, and others. This marks the first Israeli attack on Dahieh since the April 17 ceasefire, which Prime Minister Netanyahu and Defense Minister Katz said was coordinated with the United States.
Why it matters: The strike threatens the fragile ceasefire and broader US-Iran peace efforts, coming amid daily violations by both sides since April 17. Over 2,700 people have died in Lebanon since fighting began March 2, with more than 120 killed in the past week alone, including women and children.
82% of sources are Original Reporting

38 Articles • 16 hours ago
North Korea Declares It Will Not Follow Nuclear Treaty
L 21%
Center 33%
Right 46%
What happened: North Korea's UN ambassador Kim Song declared Thursday that his country is not bound by the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty under any circumstances, stating its nuclear status is enshrined in its constitution. The statement came during the 11th NPT Review Conference at UN headquarters in New York, which began April 27 and runs through May.
Why it matters: North Korea's explicit rejection of the NPT undermines global non-proliferation efforts and complicates diplomatic attempts to curb nuclear weapons spread. The country is believed to possess dozens of nuclear warheads and may produce enough material for 10 to 20 additional weapons annually, directly affecting regional security and upcoming US-China summit discussions next week.
76% of sources are Original Reporting

32 Articles • 17 hours ago
Ancient Arizona Geoglyph Destroyed During Border Wall Construction
Left 70%
C 20%
10%
What happened: On April 23, construction crews working on a federal border wall project bulldozed through the Las Playas Intaglio, a 1,000-year-old fish-shaped geoglyph in Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge. Heavy machinery destroyed roughly 60 to 70 feet of the 200-foot sacred site, despite it being documented, surveyed since 2002, and marked with protective stakes.
Why it matters: The destruction occurred because Department of Homeland Security waivers allowed contractors to bypass environmental and cultural protection laws that normally safeguard archaeological sites. This raises urgent concerns that other sacred sites along the border, including Quitobaquito Springs and Native American burial grounds, face similar threats as the administration builds three miles of wall weekly under its $46.5 billion expansion program.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
91% of sources are Original Reporting

108 Articles • 18 hours ago
US Antisemitic Incidents Drop 33% But Deadly Assaults Rise
Left 28%
Center 54%
R 18%
The numbers: The ADL recorded 6,274 antisemitic incidents in 2025, down 33% from a record 9,354 in 2024, driven by a 66% drop in campus incidents. However, physical assaults rose to a record 203 cases, and three people were killed in antisemitic attacks—the first Jewish fatalities on US soil since 2019.
Why it matters: Despite the overall decline, at least 300 people were assaulted and assaults with deadly weapons jumped 39%. The ADL is urging expanded security funding for synagogues and schools, while experts warn that 74% of Jewish victims don't report incidents and 57% now view antisemitism as a normal experience.
78% of sources are High Factuality

90 Articles • 18 hours ago
Alaska Megatsunami Ranks Second Largest Ever Recorded
Left 39%
Center 48%
R 13%
What happened: Last August, 64 million cubic metres of rock collapsed into Tracy Arm fjord near Juneau, generating a 481-metre tsunami—the second-highest ever recorded. The wave stripped vegetation up to 55 kilometres away, and while several people were in the area, no deaths were reported.
Why it matters: Climate-driven glacier retreat is destabilizing slopes across Alaska's fjords, creating growing tsunami risks in areas visited by up to six cruise ships daily carrying 6,000 passengers each. Multiple cruise lines have already stopped visiting Tracy Arm, and scientists warn Alaska lacks adequate landslide monitoring systems to detect future collapses.
76% of sources are Original Reporting