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UK facial recognition goes wide in retail; U.S. drone down over Iran; South Africa's large-scale deportations
43 Articles •
Oxford Launches First Human Trial of Bundibugyo Ebola Vaccine
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What happened: The University of Oxford began the first human trial yesterday of a vaccine targeting the Bundibugyo Ebola strain, enrolling 50 healthy adults aged 18-55 in Oxford. The vaccine uses the same ChAdOx1 platform as the Oxford-AstraZeneca COVID-19 shot and was developed just 57 days after WHO declared the outbreak a public health emergency on May 17.
Why it matters: No approved vaccine currently exists for the Bundibugyo strain causing the outbreak in Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda, which has killed 625 people with 1,792 confirmed cases. If successful, the Serum Institute of India's stockpile of 620,000 doses could enable rapid emergency use, though early-stage results won't immediately impact the current outbreak occurring in conflict zones.
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189 Articles •
Hungary Passes Amendment to End President's Mandate
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What happened: Hungary's Parliament approved a constitutional amendment yesterday with 139 votes to remove President Tamás Sulyok from office immediately, part of sweeping reforms including 12-year term limits for lawmakers and a 70-year retirement age for constitutional judges. Prime Minister Péter Magyar's Tisza party, which won a landslide supermajority in April, says the move dismantles Viktor Orbán's 16-year power structure while Fidesz boycotted the session and called it an attack on democracy.
Why it matters: This unprecedented removal reshapes Hungary's political and judicial system after Orbán's rule, potentially affecting EU relations and domestic stability. President Sulyok has five days to sign his own removal or face impeachment, while the amendment creates a new anti-corruption office and forces out Orbán-era appointees across government institutions.
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28 Articles •
LAPD Suspends Flock Safety Cameras Over Privacy Concerns
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What happened: The LAPD allowed its three-year contract with Flock Safety to expire on Saturday, suspending use of 138 automated license plate reader cameras citywide. The department cited privacy concerns, data ownership disputes, and an audit revealing 161 false stolen-vehicle alerts in two months—a 32% error rate that led to innocent drivers being pulled over at gunpoint.
Why it matters: Flock's cameras—operated by a private company, not LAPD—captured your vehicle images, location data, and identifying details like bumper stickers, storing them for 30 days. Federal agencies including ICE accessed this data without local consent, and security flaws allowed strangers to watch live feeds, raising serious risks to your privacy and civil liberties in everyday travel.
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8 Articles •
Report: YouTube Still Recommends Eating Disorder Videos to Teens
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What happened: Research by the Centre for Countering Digital Hate found that one in 10 videos recommended by YouTube's algorithm to a simulated 13-year-old profile featured eating disorder content, including extreme 170-calorie diets and 'thinspiration' compilations, despite new online safety rules taking effect in July 2025.
Why it matters: With 88% of children aged 3-17 using YouTube, harmful diet recommendations can promote eating disorders among vulnerable teens. Platforms now face fines up to 10% of global revenues if they fail to protect under-18s from dangerous content under the Online Safety Act.
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22 Articles •
Rival Libyan Military Chiefs Meet to Reunify Armed Forces
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What happened: Top military leaders from Libya's rival eastern and western armies met Sunday in Sirte alongside UN representatives to discuss reunifying the country's armed forces. The talks build on US-brokered agreements from April and joint military exercises held last year in the same coastal city.
Why it matters: Successful reunification could restore national institutions, enable progress toward elections, and stabilize control over Libya's oil revenues and public sector wages. However, critics warn that moving too quickly could trigger renewed conflict and undermine UN-led peace processes in the divided North African nation.
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