Skip to main content
See every side of every news story
Daily Briefing
Islamabad negotiations underway; Swalwell scandal takes over Dem politics; Ancient Sacrificial cast in South Korea
34 Articles •
Gen Z Grows Angry About AI Despite Continued Use
Left 29%
Center 33%
Right 38%
The findings: A Gallup survey of 1,572 people aged 14-29 conducted in late February found that 31% now feel angry about AI, up from 22% last year, while excitement dropped from 36% to 22%. Despite growing skepticism, 51% still use AI weekly or daily, nearly unchanged from last year's 47%.
Why it matters: Nearly half of Gen Z workers (48%) now believe workplace AI risks outweigh benefits, up 11 points from last year, with concerns about job security and weakened critical thinking. Eight in 10 worry that AI completing tasks faster will make learning harder, potentially affecting your career preparation and educational outcomes.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
94% of sources are Original Reporting
93 Articles •
UK Shelves Chagos Islands Handover After Trump Withdraws Support
Left 25%
Center 42%
Right 33%
What happened: Britain has shelved legislation to transfer sovereignty of the Chagos Islands to Mauritius after US President Donald Trump withdrew support for the deal. The bill will not appear in next month's King's Speech as Parliament runs out of time, effectively pausing the agreement announced last May that would have leased back the Diego Garcia military base for 99 years at £101 million annually.
Why it matters: The collapse strains US-UK relations and leaves Diego Garcia's future uncertain—a strategically vital base for projecting military power across the Middle East, South Asia, and East Africa. Without the deal, Britain faces ongoing international pressure over decolonization while 10,000 displaced Chagossians remain unable to return home, and Mauritius's sovereignty claim backed by a 2019 International Court of Justice ruling remains unresolved.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
63% of sources are Original Reporting
40 Articles •
Iran Claims US Agreed to Unfreeze $6B; White House Denies
Left 27%
C 23%
Right 50%
The dispute: Senior Iranian sources claim the US agreed to release $6 billion in frozen Iranian funds held in Qatar and other banks during Islamabad peace talks, but US officials swiftly denied any such agreement was reached. The funds, originally from Iranian oil sales, were frozen in 2018 and briefly moved to Qatari accounts in 2023 as part of a prisoner swap before being re-frozen.
Why it matters: The conflicting claims could derail critical peace negotiations aimed at ending the six-week war and reopening the Strait of Hormuz, which has caused unprecedented disruptions to global energy supplies. Iran has tied the asset release to guarantees of safe passage through the strait and broader ceasefire conditions, making resolution of this dispute essential to regional stability.
201 Articles •
Democrats Urge Swalwell to Quit California Governor Race
Left 29%
Center 44%
Right 27%
What happened: Rep. Eric Swalwell faces allegations from a former staffer that he sexually assaulted her twice while intoxicated, once in 2019 and again in 2024, detailed in a San Francisco Chronicle report last week. The congressman, who was polling near the top of California's gubernatorial race, categorically denies the claims as his legal team sent cease-and-desist letters to accusers.
Why it matters: Major Democratic endorsers including Sen. Ruben Gallego, Rep. Adam Schiff, and the California Teachers Association withdrew support by last Friday, with campaign staff resigning ahead of the June 2 primary. The allegations could reshape California's wide-open governor's race, where Swalwell held 13% support and was among the top three Democrats competing to avoid being locked out by two leading Republican candidates.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
61% of sources are Original Reporting
Seal Check SVG Icon
65% of sources are High Factuality
7 Articles •
Historic Drought Threatens Ethiopia's Myrrh Trees and Luxury Perfume Supply
Left 67%
C 17%
R 16%
What happened: Researchers visited Ethiopia's Somali region earlier this year and found myrrh tree populations declining due to a historic, multi-year drought interrupted by 2023 flooding. Adult trees produce less resin while seedlings die from lack of rain and livestock damage, threatening harvesters who earn just $3.50-$10 per kilogram.
Why it matters: The poorest residents rely solely on myrrh resin for survival, but opaque supply chains leave harvesters with minimal profits while luxury perfumes using myrrh sell for up to $500 per bottle. Researchers are pushing for direct-market solutions to secure better prices and sustainable livelihoods as climate change threatens this ancient trade.
Blindspot LogoBlindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
83 Articles •
Iranian Hackers Target Thousands of U.S. Industrial Control Systems
L 20%
Center 65%
R 15%
What happened: Federal agencies warned Tuesday that Iranian-affiliated hackers have exploited over 5,200 internet-exposed Rockwell Automation controllers across U.S. water, energy, and municipal systems since March, causing operational shutdowns and financial losses. The attackers use legitimate industrial software to access programmable logic controllers, manipulate display data, and disrupt critical infrastructure operations.
Why it matters: The campaign threatens public health services including drinking water systems and could contaminate supplies or damage expensive equipment if left unaddressed. Security experts urge immediate action: disconnect controllers from the public internet, enable multifactor authentication, and monitor network traffic for suspicious activity from overseas IP addresses.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
69% of sources are Original Reporting
Seal Check SVG Icon
60% of sources are High Factuality
7 Articles •
Ancient DNA Reveals Hereditary Sacrificial Caste in Silla Korea
Left 25%
Center 25%
Right 50%
What happened: Researchers analyzed DNA from 78 skeletons at the Imdang-Joyeong burial complex in Gyeongsan, South Korea, dating to the 4th-6th centuries. The study, published last week in Science Advances, confirmed that entire families were sacrificed together in sunjang rituals and revealed 13 family trees showing a maternal-focused kinship network spanning over a century.
Why it matters: This is the first large-scale genetic evidence confirming human sacrifice practices and a hereditary 'sacrificial caste' in ancient Korea, where specific families served as sacrifices across generations. The findings also reveal that both elites and sacrificial victims practiced close-kin marriage, including first-cousin pairings, reshaping our understanding of social structure in the Silla kingdom.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
86% of sources are Original Reporting
135 Articles •
Trump, DHS Share Florida Gas Station Clerk Murder Video
L 21%
Center 55%
R 24%
What happened: Rolbert Joachin, 40, allegedly bludgeoned Nilufar Easmin, 51, a Bangladeshi-born convenience store clerk and mother of two, to death with a hammer outside a Fort Myers gas station on April 2. Joachin confessed to the premeditated killing, telling police he returned wearing the same clothes so Easmin would recognize him after she refused to give him cash for a failed ATM transaction the day before.
Why it matters: President Trump and DHS shared graphic surveillance footage of the killing to push for ending Temporary Protected Status for over 350,000 Haitians, with the Supreme Court set to hear arguments on the issue later this month. The case has intensified national debate over immigration policy, with critics calling Trump's post racist while the administration blames Biden-era policies for allowing Joachin to remain in the U.S. after his deportation order.
Seal Check SVG Icon
68% of sources are High Factuality
67 Articles •
Hackers Claim Massive Breach of Chinese Supercomputer Data
L 24%
Center 50%
Right 26%
What happened: A group called FlamingChina claims to have stolen over 10 petabytes of sensitive data from China's National Supercomputing Center in Tianjin, including classified defense documents, missile schematics, and aerospace research. The hackers posted samples on Telegram in early February and are selling full access for hundreds of thousands of dollars in cryptocurrency.
Why it matters: If genuine, this breach exposes critical national security vulnerabilities and highlights how even state-run facilities can be compromised through basic architectural weaknesses rather than sophisticated attacks. The stolen data's intelligence value makes it attractive to foreign governments, while the six-month undetected extraction period raises concerns about cybersecurity practices protecting sensitive infrastructure worldwide.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
78% of sources are Original Reporting
News
Feed Dots Icon
For You
Search Icon
Search
Blindspot LogoBlindspotLocal