Daily Briefing
Russian DNS clamps down on Western apps; Italy approves of naval blockades against migrant boats; study reveals hair extensions are carcinogenic

36 Articles •
Al Jazeera Documents 2,842 Palestinians 'Evaporated' in Gaza
Left 65%
C 13%
R 22%
What happened: An Al Jazeera investigation published this week found that 2,842 Palestinians have been 'evaporated' since October 2023 by Israeli strikes using thermal and thermobaric weapons, leaving only blood spray or tissue fragments. Gaza Civil Defence teams documented the deaths through field investigations, cross-referencing known occupants with recovered bodies at strike sites.
Why it matters: The weapons identified include US-manufactured munitions like the MK-84, BLU-109, and GBU-39, which generate temperatures exceeding 3,500°C that instantly vaporize human tissue. Legal experts argue this raises questions about war crimes and supplier state responsibility, as families are denied remains to bury and international humanitarian law may have been violated in densely populated areas.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
89% of sources are Original Reporting

138 Articles •
Russia Blocks Telegram, WhatsApp, YouTube via National DNS System
Left 40%
Center 40%
R 20%
What happened: Russia's internet regulator Roskomnadzor began restricting Telegram on Feb. 10, slowing media downloads and disrupting voice and video messages for millions of users. Officials accuse Telegram of failing to combat fraud and inadequately protecting user data, while promoting state-backed messenger Max, which reached 70 million monthly users in December.
Why it matters: The restrictions affect Telegram's 93.6 million monthly Russian users and push citizens toward Max, a government-controlled platform integrated with payments and services that human rights groups warn could enable mass surveillance. Many Russians now rely on VPNs to bypass censorship as the Kremlin tightens control over digital communications under its 'sovereign internet' strategy.
71% of sources are Original Reporting

181 Articles •
18-Year-Old Jesse Van Rootselaar Identified as Tumbler Ridge School Shooter
Left 30%
Center 37%
Right 33%
What happened: Jesse Van Rootselaar, 18, killed her mother and 11-year-old stepbrother at home yesterday afternoon, then opened fire at Tumbler Ridge Secondary School in British Columbia, killing a 39-year-old teacher and five students aged 12 and 13. Van Rootselaar died from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound; police recovered a long gun and modified handgun at the scene.
Why it matters: This attack marks one of Canada's deadliest school shootings in recent history, prompting national mourning and renewed debate about mental health services and gun control. The suspect had documented mental health concerns and prior police interventions; firearms previously seized from the home were later returned to a lawful owner, and the suspect's gun license had expired in 2024.
71% of sources are Original Reporting

23 Articles •
Italy Approves Bill Allowing Naval Blockades Against Migrant Boats
Left 28%
Center 33%
Right 39%
What happened: Yesterday, Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's cabinet approved legislation authorizing Italian authorities to impose 30-day naval blockades on migrant vessels during exceptional migratory pressure, with fines up to €50,000 and boat confiscations for violations. The bill also enables transfers of intercepted migrants to third countries like Albania and expands grounds for expulsion, implementing the EU Migration Pact approved this week.
Why it matters: If parliament approves the bill, thousands of migrants and rescue operations will be affected as Italy gains power to block humanitarian vessels and return asylum seekers to offshore processing centers. The measures could reshape migration flows across the Central Mediterranean, where nearly 490 people have died this year, while raising legal challenges and humanitarian concerns about access to protection.
61% of sources are Original Reporting
65% of sources are High Factuality

41 Articles •
Study: Hair Extensions Contain Dozens of Carcinogens
Left 38%
Center 43%
R 19%
The findings: Silent Spring Institute tested 43 hair extension products and detected 169 chemicals, including flame retardants, phthalates, and pesticides linked to cancer and hormone disruption. All but two products contained hazardous chemicals, with some synthetic samples showing chlorine levels as high as 277,000 micrograms per gram and nearly 10% containing banned organotins above EU regulatory limits.
Why it matters: More than 70% of Black women use hair extensions at least once yearly, wearing them directly on the scalp for weeks or months where they can release chemicals when heated. Most products don't list ingredients, leaving consumers unable to make informed choices, while several states and the FDA are now considering new safety regulations.

11 Articles •
World Monuments Fund Commits $7 Million to Save Heritage Sites
Center 100%
The details: World Monuments Fund announced yesterday it will invest roughly $7 million in 2026 to support 21 preservation projects across five continents, including Belfast's Assembly Rooms, Saint Louis Cemetery No. 2 in New Orleans, and earthquake-damaged sites in Japan and Turkey. Funding from donors including AXA Foundation and Accor will support documentation, emergency conservation, rehabilitation planning, adaptive reuse, and workforce training programs delivered with local partners.
Why it matters: WMF's interventions help communities facing urgent threats from climate change, natural disasters, and conflict by building local preservation capacity and catalyzing long-term recovery. Historically, WMF has contributed over $120 million to roughly 350 sites, and its Watch inclusion has helped communities secure an additional $300 million in follow-on funding from other sources.
91% of sources are Original Reporting

13 Articles •
Unsolicited Seed Packages from China Threaten Texas Agriculture
L 22%
Center 67%
11%
What happened: Over 1,100 unsolicited seed packages, apparently shipped from China, have arrived at Texas homes since February last year, with the last collection on December 29. The Texas Department of Agriculture warns residents not to open or plant the seeds and to report them immediately by calling 1-800-TELL-TDA.
Why it matters: Officials warn these seeds could introduce invasive species, pests, or plant diseases that could devastate Texas farms, ranches, and food supply. The packages may be part of a brushing scam using addresses harvested from previous online orders on platforms like Temu or TikTok.
100% of sources are Original Reporting

47 Articles •
Ukrainian Athlete Defies IOC Ban on Memorial Helmet
Left 52%
Center 32%
R 16%
What happened: Vladyslav Heraskevych, a 27-year-old Ukrainian skeleton racer and medal contender, plans to compete Thursday and Friday at the Milan-Cortina Olympics wearing a helmet featuring portraits of dozens of Ukrainian athletes killed in Russia's invasion, despite the IOC banning it Monday as a political statement.
Why it matters: The standoff highlights ongoing debate about politics in Olympic sports and could set precedents for commemorative expressions at future Games. Heraskevych's defiance risks disqualification but has drawn widespread Ukrainian support including from President Zelenskyy, bringing global attention to Ukraine's wartime losses as Russian forces make battlefield advances during a harsh winter.
87% of sources are Original Reporting
Daily Briefing
Russian DNS clamps down on Western apps; Italy approves of naval blockades against migrant boats; study reveals hair extensions are carcinogenic


36 Articles •
Al Jazeera Documents 2,842 Palestinians 'Evaporated' in Gaza
Left 65%
C 13%
R 22%
What happened: An Al Jazeera investigation published this week found that 2,842 Palestinians have been 'evaporated' since October 2023 by Israeli strikes using thermal and thermobaric weapons, leaving only blood spray or tissue fragments. Gaza Civil Defence teams documented the deaths through field investigations, cross-referencing known occupants with recovered bodies at strike sites.
Why it matters: The weapons identified include US-manufactured munitions like the MK-84, BLU-109, and GBU-39, which generate temperatures exceeding 3,500°C that instantly vaporize human tissue. Legal experts argue this raises questions about war crimes and supplier state responsibility, as families are denied remains to bury and international humanitarian law may have been violated in densely populated areas.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
89% of sources are Original Reporting

138 Articles •
Russia Blocks Telegram, WhatsApp, YouTube via National DNS System
Left 40%
Center 40%
R 20%
What happened: Russia's internet regulator Roskomnadzor began restricting Telegram on Feb. 10, slowing media downloads and disrupting voice and video messages for millions of users. Officials accuse Telegram of failing to combat fraud and inadequately protecting user data, while promoting state-backed messenger Max, which reached 70 million monthly users in December.
Why it matters: The restrictions affect Telegram's 93.6 million monthly Russian users and push citizens toward Max, a government-controlled platform integrated with payments and services that human rights groups warn could enable mass surveillance. Many Russians now rely on VPNs to bypass censorship as the Kremlin tightens control over digital communications under its 'sovereign internet' strategy.
71% of sources are Original Reporting

181 Articles •
18-Year-Old Jesse Van Rootselaar Identified as Tumbler Ridge School Shooter
Left 30%
Center 37%
Right 33%
What happened: Jesse Van Rootselaar, 18, killed her mother and 11-year-old stepbrother at home yesterday afternoon, then opened fire at Tumbler Ridge Secondary School in British Columbia, killing a 39-year-old teacher and five students aged 12 and 13. Van Rootselaar died from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound; police recovered a long gun and modified handgun at the scene.
Why it matters: This attack marks one of Canada's deadliest school shootings in recent history, prompting national mourning and renewed debate about mental health services and gun control. The suspect had documented mental health concerns and prior police interventions; firearms previously seized from the home were later returned to a lawful owner, and the suspect's gun license had expired in 2024.
71% of sources are Original Reporting

23 Articles •
Italy Approves Bill Allowing Naval Blockades Against Migrant Boats
Left 28%
Center 33%
Right 39%
What happened: Yesterday, Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's cabinet approved legislation authorizing Italian authorities to impose 30-day naval blockades on migrant vessels during exceptional migratory pressure, with fines up to €50,000 and boat confiscations for violations. The bill also enables transfers of intercepted migrants to third countries like Albania and expands grounds for expulsion, implementing the EU Migration Pact approved this week.
Why it matters: If parliament approves the bill, thousands of migrants and rescue operations will be affected as Italy gains power to block humanitarian vessels and return asylum seekers to offshore processing centers. The measures could reshape migration flows across the Central Mediterranean, where nearly 490 people have died this year, while raising legal challenges and humanitarian concerns about access to protection.
61% of sources are Original Reporting
65% of sources are High Factuality

41 Articles •
Study: Hair Extensions Contain Dozens of Carcinogens
Left 38%
Center 43%
R 19%
The findings: Silent Spring Institute tested 43 hair extension products and detected 169 chemicals, including flame retardants, phthalates, and pesticides linked to cancer and hormone disruption. All but two products contained hazardous chemicals, with some synthetic samples showing chlorine levels as high as 277,000 micrograms per gram and nearly 10% containing banned organotins above EU regulatory limits.
Why it matters: More than 70% of Black women use hair extensions at least once yearly, wearing them directly on the scalp for weeks or months where they can release chemicals when heated. Most products don't list ingredients, leaving consumers unable to make informed choices, while several states and the FDA are now considering new safety regulations.

11 Articles •
World Monuments Fund Commits $7 Million to Save Heritage Sites
Center 100%
The details: World Monuments Fund announced yesterday it will invest roughly $7 million in 2026 to support 21 preservation projects across five continents, including Belfast's Assembly Rooms, Saint Louis Cemetery No. 2 in New Orleans, and earthquake-damaged sites in Japan and Turkey. Funding from donors including AXA Foundation and Accor will support documentation, emergency conservation, rehabilitation planning, adaptive reuse, and workforce training programs delivered with local partners.
Why it matters: WMF's interventions help communities facing urgent threats from climate change, natural disasters, and conflict by building local preservation capacity and catalyzing long-term recovery. Historically, WMF has contributed over $120 million to roughly 350 sites, and its Watch inclusion has helped communities secure an additional $300 million in follow-on funding from other sources.
91% of sources are Original Reporting

13 Articles •
Unsolicited Seed Packages from China Threaten Texas Agriculture
L 22%
Center 67%
11%
What happened: Over 1,100 unsolicited seed packages, apparently shipped from China, have arrived at Texas homes since February last year, with the last collection on December 29. The Texas Department of Agriculture warns residents not to open or plant the seeds and to report them immediately by calling 1-800-TELL-TDA.
Why it matters: Officials warn these seeds could introduce invasive species, pests, or plant diseases that could devastate Texas farms, ranches, and food supply. The packages may be part of a brushing scam using addresses harvested from previous online orders on platforms like Temu or TikTok.
100% of sources are Original Reporting

47 Articles •
Ukrainian Athlete Defies IOC Ban on Memorial Helmet
Left 52%
Center 32%
R 16%
What happened: Vladyslav Heraskevych, a 27-year-old Ukrainian skeleton racer and medal contender, plans to compete Thursday and Friday at the Milan-Cortina Olympics wearing a helmet featuring portraits of dozens of Ukrainian athletes killed in Russia's invasion, despite the IOC banning it Monday as a political statement.
Why it matters: The standoff highlights ongoing debate about politics in Olympic sports and could set precedents for commemorative expressions at future Games. Heraskevych's defiance risks disqualification but has drawn widespread Ukrainian support including from President Zelenskyy, bringing global attention to Ukraine's wartime losses as Russian forces make battlefield advances during a harsh winter.
87% of sources are Original Reporting