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Meta goes after Australian NBI; Albania backlash to Kushner real estate; BBC apologizes to Farage
38 Articles •
Wired Finds Facial Recognition Code Hidden in Meta's Smart Glasses App
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What happened: WIRED discovered that Meta quietly integrated facial recognition code called NameTag into its Meta AI companion app, downloaded over 50 million times. The code, added as early as January, can convert faces captured by Ray-Ban and Oakley smart glasses into biometric faceprints, compare them against stored data on users' phones, and notify wearers of recognized individuals.
Why it matters: If activated, this technology could enable real-time identification of strangers in public without consent, raising risks of stalking and surveillance. Meta previously paid $2.05 billion in settlements over unauthorized biometric data collection, and privacy groups including the ACLU warn the feature could normalize mass identification in everyday life.
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89% of sources are Original Reporting
493 Articles •
Zelenskyy Pens Open Letter to Putin Calling for Face-to-Face Talks
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What happened: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy published an open letter yesterday directly to Russian President Vladimir Putin proposing a face-to-face meeting in a neutral country like Switzerland or Turkey. He called for a full ceasefire during negotiations, an all-for-all prisoner exchange, and the return of Ukrainian civilians and children taken to Russia.
Why it matters: Zelenskyy timed his appeal as Ukraine regained battlefield ground through long-range strikes and as Ukrainian intelligence indicated Russia plans to prolong the war into 2027-2028. The proposal aims to capitalize on Russia's mounting costs—including over 30,000 casualties in May alone, fuel shortages, and rising prices—while the U.S. remains focused on Iran tensions.
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77% of sources are Original Reporting
204 Articles •
Sherpa Guide Survives Six Days Alone on Everest
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What happened: Dawa Sherpa, 52, disappeared on May 29 while descending Everest with a Polish client and was found yesterday crawling near Base Camp by a cleanup crew. He survived six days without food, water or oxygen before being airlifted to a Kathmandu hospital where his family, who had begun funeral rites, awaited him.
Why it matters: The rescue highlights extreme risks Sherpa guides face during Everest's record-breaking season when over 1,000 climbers summited this May. Delayed search efforts and overcrowding concerns underscore ongoing safety debates as the climbing industry expands, with at least five deaths reported this season.
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74% of sources are Original Reporting
251 Articles •
Anthropic Urges AI Labs to Pause Frontier Development
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What happened: Anthropic published a report this week warning that AI systems are beginning to accelerate their own development, with Claude now writing over 80% of the company's code and completing tasks that would take humans years. The San Francisco-based AI company, valued at $965 billion after raising $65 billion last month, is calling for a coordinated industry-wide slowdown to prevent systems from outpacing safety frameworks.
Why it matters: If AI systems achieve recursive self-improvement—the ability to design their own successors—progress could compress years of advancement into weeks, potentially leaving governments and society unable to adapt or maintain control. Anthropic warns this could affect everything from software engineering jobs to global AI competition, though the company notes coordination would require unprecedented cooperation between rival labs and nations including the US and China.
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73% of sources are Original Reporting
7 Articles •
Report: Google Staff Allegedly Mock AI Tools With Internal Memes
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What happened: A report says Google staff allegedly mocked internal AI tools with memes, but reporting contains no verifiable names, dates, or examples. Key facts remain unconfirmed.
Why it matters: If confirmed, internal mockery could undermine trust in Google’s AI products, affect employee morale, and invite regulatory attention; current reporting lacks corroboration.
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100% of sources are Original Reporting
157 Articles •
Audit Reveals Andrew Subletted Royal Lodge Properties
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What happened: A National Audit Office report revealed Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor sublet three cottages on the Royal Lodge estate while paying only a peppercorn rent for the 30-room mansion under a 2003 lease. The cottages remained occupied until April, though rental income amounts were not disclosed, and Andrew moved to Sandringham earlier this year after being stripped of his titles.
Why it matters: The audit exposes questions about value for money in royal property arrangements, with Parliament's Public Accounts Committee launching an inquiry later this year. While Andrew paid effectively nothing for a mansion and pocketed subletting income, Prince William pays £307,200 annually for his Windsor home, highlighting disparities that fuel public debate about royal finances and transparency.
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67% of sources are Original Reporting
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70% of sources are High Factuality
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