Daily Briefing
Putin backs Cuba; Microsoft develops glass that stores data for 10,000 years; State Department developing portal to block European content bans

18 Articles •
New Study Warns Antarctic Peninsula Faces Irreversible Damage Without Rapid Emissions Cuts
L 22%
Center 56%
R 22%
The findings: Scientists modeled three emission scenarios for the Antarctic Peninsula through 2100, finding low emissions would limit warming to 1.8°C and preserve most ice and wildlife, while medium-high (3.6°C) and very high (4.4°C) scenarios trigger irreversible ice shelf collapse, 20% sea ice loss, and devastating impacts on penguins, whales, and krill-dependent ecosystems.
Why it matters: The world is currently on track for a medium-to-high emissions future, and decisions made this decade will determine whether Antarctic changes remain reversible or cross permanent tipping points that drive global sea level rise of up to 116 millimeters, exposing six million more people to coastal flooding per centimeter of rise.
94% of sources are Original Reporting

17 Articles •
Caltech Astrophysicist Carl Grillmair Fatally Shot Dead in Rural Home
L 13%
Center 80%
7%
What happened: Carl Grillmair, a 67-year-old Caltech research scientist, was fatally shot on his front porch in Llano early Monday morning, February 16. Freddy Snyder, 29, was arrested and charged with murder, carjacking and burglary, though authorities have not disclosed a motive or relationship between the two men.
Why it matters: Grillmair was an accomplished astrophysicist who spent over four decades advancing research on the Milky Way's structure, stellar streams and exoplanets as a principal investigator on NASA's Hubble and Spitzer telescopes. His death removes a leading researcher whose work helped reshape understanding of how galaxies evolve and identified water signatures on planets beyond our solar system.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
76% of sources are Original Reporting
71% of sources are High Factuality

59 Articles •
Epstein Estate Settles Class Action for Up to $35 Million
Left 28%
Center 36%
Right 36%
The details: Jeffrey Epstein's estate agreed yesterday to pay up to $35 million to settle a Manhattan class-action lawsuit against his former lawyer Darren Indyke and accountant Richard Kahn, who allegedly aided his sex trafficking between 1995 and 2019. The payout depends on eligible victims: $35 million if 40 or more qualify, $25 million if fewer, and requires federal judge approval.
Why it matters: This settlement adds to over $170 million already paid by Epstein's estate through previous restitution funds and settlements, providing another confidential avenue for victims who haven't yet resolved claims. The co-executors deny wrongdoing but chose to settle to achieve finality and avoid prolonged litigation.
78% of sources are Original Reporting

98 Articles •
Tucker Carlson Claims Detention at Israeli Airport, Officials Deny
Left 25%
C 24%
Right 51%
What happened: Tucker Carlson says Israeli security detained him and his team at Ben Gurion Airport last week after interviewing U.S. Ambassador Mike Huckabee, seizing passports and interrogating his executive producer about their discussion. Israeli authorities and the U.S. Embassy deny any detention occurred, stating Carlson received only routine passport checks and privacy-protecting questions in a VIP lounge before departing.
Why it matters: The dispute highlights growing conservative tensions over Israel's influence in U.S. politics and treatment of Christians, with Carlson—who reaches millions and advises the White House—emerging as a prominent critic calling Israel's Gaza operations genocide. The conflicting accounts raise questions about press access, diplomatic transparency, and whether criticism of Israeli policy will reshape Republican foreign policy positions.
94% of sources are Original Reporting
Daily Briefing
Putin backs Cuba; Microsoft develops glass that stores data for 10,000 years; State Department developing portal to block European content bans


18 Articles •
New Study Warns Antarctic Peninsula Faces Irreversible Damage Without Rapid Emissions Cuts
L 22%
Center 56%
R 22%
The findings: Scientists modeled three emission scenarios for the Antarctic Peninsula through 2100, finding low emissions would limit warming to 1.8°C and preserve most ice and wildlife, while medium-high (3.6°C) and very high (4.4°C) scenarios trigger irreversible ice shelf collapse, 20% sea ice loss, and devastating impacts on penguins, whales, and krill-dependent ecosystems.
Why it matters: The world is currently on track for a medium-to-high emissions future, and decisions made this decade will determine whether Antarctic changes remain reversible or cross permanent tipping points that drive global sea level rise of up to 116 millimeters, exposing six million more people to coastal flooding per centimeter of rise.
94% of sources are Original Reporting

17 Articles •
Caltech Astrophysicist Carl Grillmair Fatally Shot Dead in Rural Home
L 13%
Center 80%
7%
What happened: Carl Grillmair, a 67-year-old Caltech research scientist, was fatally shot on his front porch in Llano early Monday morning, February 16. Freddy Snyder, 29, was arrested and charged with murder, carjacking and burglary, though authorities have not disclosed a motive or relationship between the two men.
Why it matters: Grillmair was an accomplished astrophysicist who spent over four decades advancing research on the Milky Way's structure, stellar streams and exoplanets as a principal investigator on NASA's Hubble and Spitzer telescopes. His death removes a leading researcher whose work helped reshape understanding of how galaxies evolve and identified water signatures on planets beyond our solar system.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
76% of sources are Original Reporting
71% of sources are High Factuality

59 Articles •
Epstein Estate Settles Class Action for Up to $35 Million
Left 28%
Center 36%
Right 36%
The details: Jeffrey Epstein's estate agreed yesterday to pay up to $35 million to settle a Manhattan class-action lawsuit against his former lawyer Darren Indyke and accountant Richard Kahn, who allegedly aided his sex trafficking between 1995 and 2019. The payout depends on eligible victims: $35 million if 40 or more qualify, $25 million if fewer, and requires federal judge approval.
Why it matters: This settlement adds to over $170 million already paid by Epstein's estate through previous restitution funds and settlements, providing another confidential avenue for victims who haven't yet resolved claims. The co-executors deny wrongdoing but chose to settle to achieve finality and avoid prolonged litigation.
78% of sources are Original Reporting

98 Articles •
Tucker Carlson Claims Detention at Israeli Airport, Officials Deny
Left 25%
C 24%
Right 51%
What happened: Tucker Carlson says Israeli security detained him and his team at Ben Gurion Airport last week after interviewing U.S. Ambassador Mike Huckabee, seizing passports and interrogating his executive producer about their discussion. Israeli authorities and the U.S. Embassy deny any detention occurred, stating Carlson received only routine passport checks and privacy-protecting questions in a VIP lounge before departing.
Why it matters: The dispute highlights growing conservative tensions over Israel's influence in U.S. politics and treatment of Christians, with Carlson—who reaches millions and advises the White House—emerging as a prominent critic calling Israel's Gaza operations genocide. The conflicting accounts raise questions about press access, diplomatic transparency, and whether criticism of Israeli policy will reshape Republican foreign policy positions.
94% of sources are Original Reporting