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IRGC shows map of control; Indian elections show upsets; GameStop's drive to be a re-sale empire
19 Articles •
White House Considers Vetting New AI Models
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The plan: The White House is considering an executive order to create an AI working group that would establish pre-release review procedures for powerful AI models. Senior officials briefed executives from Anthropic, Google, and OpenAI last week on potential oversight approaches involving the NSA, Office of the National Cyber Director, and Director of National Intelligence.
Why it matters: The proposal represents a dramatic reversal from Trump's earlier deregulatory stance and was prompted by security concerns over Anthropic's Mythos model, which experts warn could identify software vulnerabilities and accelerate cyberattacks. A pre-release review process could slow AI model launches, reshape safety practices, and give the federal government unprecedented influence over private AI development before models reach the public.
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100% of sources are Original Reporting
118 Articles •
Putin Retreating to Bunkers Amid Coup and Drone Fears, EU Intelligence Reports Claim
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What happened: European intelligence reports the Kremlin sharply increased security around President Vladimir Putin since early March 2026, installing surveillance in staffers' homes, banning internet devices, and restricting his movements amid fears of drone assassination attempts and internal coup plots. The measures followed December 2025's killing of Lieutenant General Fanil Sarvarov and a heated security meeting where Chief of General Staff Valery Gerasimov blamed FSB chief Alexander Bortnikov for protection failures.
Why it matters: The unprecedented security measures and reported infighting among Russia's top military and intelligence leadership signal deepening instability inside the Kremlin as the war in Ukraine drags into its fifth year with an estimated 30,000 Russian casualties monthly. Former Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu is now viewed as a coup risk due to his continued military influence, while Putin has stopped visiting military facilities this year and relies increasingly on prerecorded footage for public appearances.
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91% of sources are Original Reporting
25 Articles •
NHS Begins Rollout of One-Minute Cancer Injection
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What's happening: The NHS has started offering pembrolizumab (Keytruda) as a one-minute under-the-skin injection for 14 cancer types, replacing intravenous infusions that previously took up to two hours. Around 14,000 patients start this immunotherapy annually in England, with injections given every three or six weeks into the thigh or stomach.
Why it matters: The new injection slashes appointment times by up to 90%, freeing over 100,000 clinical hours annually across the NHS and reducing pressure on chemotherapy units. Patients spend minutes instead of hours in hospital, while pharmacy teams no longer need to prepare sterile IV bags, creating capacity to treat more people and reduce waiting times.
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76% of sources are Original Reporting
33 Articles •
IRGC Unveils Map Claiming Control Over Strait of Hormuz
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What happened: Today, Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps published a map claiming naval control over defined areas of the Strait of Hormuz, drawing boundaries from Iranian territory to UAE coastlines. The IRGC announced commercial vessels must follow its transit protocols or face being forcefully stopped, while a U.S. Navy frigate was reportedly struck by missiles after ignoring Iranian warnings.
Why it matters: The Strait of Hormuz is a vital international shipping chokepoint, and Iran's control claim could severely disrupt global maritime trade and energy supplies. Ship traffic has already plummeted to just nine vessels in 24 hours, while escalating military confrontation between Iran and the U.S. raises risks of broader regional conflict that could affect fuel prices and supply chains worldwide.
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97% of sources are Original Reporting
89 Articles •
Austria Expels Three Russian Diplomats Over Spy Antenna Network
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What happened: Austria expelled three Russian embassy staff on Monday after discovering an 'antenna forest' of satellite dishes on Russian diplomatic buildings in Vienna suspected of intercepting communications from international organizations including the IAEA and OSCE. The Russian ambassador was summoned in April and refused to lift diplomatic immunity for investigation, prompting the expulsions.
Why it matters: This marks the 14th Russian diplomat expelled by Austria since 2020, signaling deteriorating relations and raising concerns about the security of sensitive communications from major international organizations headquartered in Vienna. Russia has warned of 'harsh' retaliation, while Austria is tightening espionage laws to better protect international organizations operating on its soil.
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72% of sources are Original Reporting
132 Articles •
BJP Poised to Win West Bengal as Vijay Surges in Tamil Nadu
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What happened: Early counting trends today show the BJP crossing the majority mark of 148 in West Bengal's 294-seat assembly, leading in 165 seats against the TMC's 123. In Tamil Nadu, actor Vijay's two-year-old TVK party is leading in 108 of 234 seats, ahead of both the DMK and AIADMK, while in Kerala the Congress-led UDF is leading in 97 of 140 seats.
Why it matters: A BJP victory would mark its first-ever government in West Bengal and strengthen Prime Minister Modi's position midway through his third term ahead of 2029 national elections. The rise of actor Vijay's TVK as a major force in Tamil Nadu and the potential end of communist rule in Kerala signal major political realignments that could reshape India's opposition landscape and regional power dynamics.
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73% of sources are Original Reporting
336 Articles •
GameStop Proposes Ambitious Takeover of eBay Worth $56 Billion
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The details: GameStop has made an unsolicited offer to acquire eBay for $125 per share in a 50-50 cash-and-stock deal, valuing the e-commerce giant at approximately $56 billion. CEO Ryan Cohen has secured a $20 billion debt commitment from TD Bank and already built a 5% stake in eBay, with plans to cut $2 billion in annual costs within 12 months and integrate GameStop's 1,600 U.S. stores as authentication and fulfillment hubs for eBay's marketplace.
Why it matters: This would be one of the most unusual corporate takeovers in recent history, with a $12 billion meme-stock retailer attempting to acquire a company four times its size. If successful, the combined entity could reshape the secondhand marketplace for collectibles, trading cards, and retro gaming products, though the deal faces significant regulatory scrutiny and requires approval from eBay's board, regulators, and shareholders across multiple jurisdictions.
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76% of sources are Original Reporting
327 Articles •
Morocco: Two US Soldiers Missing During African Lion Exercise
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What happened: Two US Army soldiers were reported missing Saturday night around 9 p.m. near Cap Draa Training Area in Tan-Tan, Morocco, after going on an off-duty recreational hike near ocean cliffs. Initial reports suggest they may have slipped and fallen into the Atlantic Ocean in what officials describe as an accident unrelated to the ongoing African Lion 2026 exercise.
Why it matters: The disappearance has halted parts of African Lion, the US military's largest annual exercise in Africa involving over 7,000 personnel from 30-plus nations. A massive multinational search operation using helicopters, ships, drones, mountain rescue units and divers remains underway along Morocco's rugged southwestern coast, with the incident raising safety concerns for future multinational training events.
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186 Articles •
Nobel Laureate Narges Mohammadi Faces Life-Threatening Cardiac Crisis in Iranian Prison
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What happened: Nobel Peace Prize laureate Narges Mohammadi, 54, was urgently transferred from Zanjan prison to a hospital on Friday after suffering two episodes of unconsciousness and a severe cardiac crisis. The transfer followed 140 days of alleged medical neglect since her December 12 arrest, with prison doctors determining her condition could no longer be managed on-site despite family requests for specialist care in Tehran.
Why it matters: Mohammadi's case highlights the treatment of political prisoners and dissidents in Iran, particularly regarding access to medical care. The 2023 Nobel laureate, who has been arrested 13 times and sentenced to 31 years total for human rights work, faces immediate life-threatening danger as Iranian authorities continue to deny her transfer to specialist cardiac care in Tehran despite international pressure.
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66% of sources are Original Reporting
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