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Businessman accuses Ukraine of Monaco bombing; FIFA looking into Malvinas banner; 'Earth-like' planet detected
50 Articles •
FIFA Detects Seven Million Harmful Posts During World Cup
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The numbers: FIFA's Social Media Protection Service detected over 7 million potentially harmful posts during the ongoing World Cup, reviewed more than 500,000 AI-flagged messages, and reported over 1,000 credible threats to law enforcement. The detection rate jumped 14 times higher than the 2022 tournament, with racial abuse comprising over 11% of early abusive content.
Why it matters: The massive surge in online abuse targeting players and officials demonstrates how social media toxicity escalates during major sporting events, requiring unprecedented moderation resources and law enforcement intervention. This trend could reshape how platforms and sports organizations approach online safety and fan behavior at future tournaments.
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84% of sources are Original Reporting
75 Articles •
State Department Issues Global Travel Warning as U.S.-Iran War Escalates
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What happened: The State Department issued a Worldwide Caution last Saturday urging Americans abroad to exercise increased caution as U.S.-Iran hostilities intensify following a collapsed ceasefire. Two American service members were killed and one remains missing after an Iranian missile and drone attack in Jordan, bringing total U.S. military deaths to 16 with over 420 wounded.
What it means: Americans traveling or living overseas face heightened risks as Iranian-aligned groups may target U.S. interests and diplomatic facilities worldwide. Travelers should expect possible flight cancellations and airspace closures, especially in the Middle East, and closely monitor updates from nearby U.S. embassies, though no evacuations have been ordered.
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95% of sources are Original Reporting
268 Articles •
Report: Trump Media Pitches $100K Monthly Fee for Faster Access to President's Posts
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What happened: Trump Media & Technology Group announced Thursday it will launch Truth API on August 1, selling millisecond-faster access to influential Truth Social posts for up to $100,000 monthly to Wall Street trading firms. The service targets the platform's top accounts, including President Trump's 12.9 million-follower account, and has already signed customers.
Why it matters: Trump's Truth Social posts have previously moved markets within seconds—his April 2025 tariff pause announcement sent stocks soaring 9.5% in one day. The paid feed gives institutional traders a crucial millisecond advantage to profit from presidential policy announcements before the public sees them, raising unprecedented conflict-of-interest concerns since Trump, as majority shareholder, profits directly.
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74% of sources are Original Reporting
121 Articles •
Brazilian Court Blocks Milei Visit and Tightens Bolsonaro Restrictions
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What happened: Brazil's Supreme Court rejected Argentine President Javier Milei's request to visit former president Jair Bolsonaro under house arrest and imposed a 30-day visitor ban after Bolsonaro violated his house arrest terms by having his son share a political endorsement letter on social media.
Why it matters: The restrictions prevent Bolsonaro from campaigning or influencing Brazil's October elections, where his son Flávio is expected to challenge incumbent President Lula, and could strain diplomatic relations between Brazil and Argentina amid accusations of politically motivated interference.
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84% of sources are Original Reporting
15 Articles •
Iran's Reclusive New Leader May Speak with Putin First, TASS Reports
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What happened: TASS reports Iran's reclusive new leader may speak first with Vladimir Putin, suggesting early engagement with Moscow; specific timing and confirmations are not yet available.
Why it matters: If accurate, an initial call to Putin would prioritize Russia in Tehran's foreign relations and could shape regional diplomacy and sanctions discussions; readers should await official confirmation.
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87% of sources are Original Reporting
492 Articles •
Tate Brothers Arrested in Miami on UK Sex Charges
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What happened: Andrew and Tristan Tate were arrested yesterday in Miami by U.S. Marshals after British prosecutors authorized 38 additional charges including rape, trafficking, and child exploitation offenses. The brothers now face 59 total charges relating to seven alleged victims, with offenses spanning July 2010 to August 2017.
Why it matters: The arrests represent a major expansion of international prosecution efforts against high-profile influencers with millions of young followers. UK authorities are seeking extradition while Romanian proceedings remain open, creating a complex multi-jurisdictional legal battle that could set precedents for cross-border cooperation in sex crime cases.
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63% of sources are Original Reporting
28 Articles •
Trump Tentatively Agrees to Let Saudi Arabia Enrich Uranium Without Standard Safeguards
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What happened: President Trump tentatively agreed to let Saudi Arabia enrich uranium without standard safeguards, per reports; the decision marks a notable shift in U.S. nuclear policy and prompts diplomatic scrutiny.
Why it matters: If finalized, the move could weaken nonproliferation norms, affect U.S. credibility with allies, and raise regional security and proliferation risks in the Middle East.
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