Daily Briefing
Iran disinfo campaigns; Russia providing intel to Iran; a potential breach in FBI wiretap service

8 Articles •
China to Power Up World's First Accelerator-Driven Nuclear Reactor in 2027
Left 33%
Center 67%
What's happening: China is installing final components of the world's first megawatt-level accelerator-driven subcritical system in Guangdong province, with operations set to begin in 2027. The facility uses a superconducting particle accelerator firing proton beams at lead-bismuth to generate neutrons that transmute long-lived nuclear waste while producing power.
Why it matters: This technology could reduce nuclear waste hazard lifespans from 100,000 years to just 300 years while eliminating meltdown risks through its subcritical design. If successful, the system promises safer nuclear energy and efficient waste management, potentially providing stable power for centuries while addressing two major barriers to nuclear adoption.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting
63% of sources are High Factuality

19 Articles •
UK Surgeon Performs First Remote Robotic Surgery From 1,500 Miles Away
L 20%
Center 40%
Right 40%
What happened: Professor Prokar Dasgupta performed the UK's first long-distance robotic prostate surgery from London on patient Paul Buxton, 62, in Gibraltar on February 11, controlling a four-armed robot over 1,500 miles away with only a 0.06-second delay. A second procedure on a 52-year-old man followed on March 4, with another livestreamed operation planned for March 14 before 20,000 surgeons.
Why it matters: Remote robotic surgery could eliminate the expense and inconvenience of traveling for specialist care, particularly benefiting patients in remote areas like Gibraltar who currently must fly to London or Madrid for complex procedures. The technology may help reduce NHS waiting lists and expand access to top surgeons anywhere, with the NHS planning to increase robotic procedures from 70,000 to 500,000 annually over the next decade.
79% of sources are Original Reporting

49 Articles •
Iran's AI Disinformation Campaign Surges, Report Finds
L 23%
Center 57%
R 20%
What happened: Over the past week, millions of misleading videos and AI-generated images falsely depicting strikes in Israel and Iran have flooded X, TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube. Many viral clips showing Tel Aviv attacks are AI-generated, repurposed footage from Algeria and video games like Arma 3 and War Thunder, or out-of-context images—some viewed over 7 million times before removal.
Why it matters: This disinformation surge risks distorting your understanding of the conflict, as pro-Iran accounts spread false narratives to demoralize audiences and claim military victories. X announced March 3 it will suspend accounts from revenue-sharing for 90 days if they post undisclosed AI war content, but experts warn automated verification tools like Grok have failed, incorrectly validating fake videos as real.
90% of sources are Original Reporting
71% of sources are High Factuality

100 Articles •
Russia Sharing Intelligence with Iran to Target US Forces, Officials Say
Left 31%
Center 26%
Right 43%
What happened: Russia is providing Iran with detailed targeting intelligence on US military positions, including warships and aircraft locations across the Middle East. An Iranian drone strike in Kuwait killed six US service members on Sunday, while Iran has launched thousands of drones and hundreds of missiles at US facilities.
Why it matters: This marks the first clear indication that a nuclear-armed US adversary is indirectly involved in the expanding Middle East conflict by helping target American forces. Military analysts note Iran's strikes show unusual precision, suggesting access to Russia's advanced satellite and battlefield intelligence developed during the Ukraine war.
96% of sources are Original Reporting

57 Articles •
FBI Confirms Cyber Breach on Wiretap Surveillance Network
L 20%
Center 73%
7%
What happened: The FBI began investigating suspicious activity on Feb. 17 targeting an internal system used to manage wiretaps, foreign intelligence surveillance warrants, and pen-register data containing personally identifiable information. Hackers used sophisticated techniques, including leveraging a commercial internet service provider's infrastructure to exploit FBI network security controls.
Why it matters: The breach could expose surveillance data from ongoing investigations and personally identifiable information, threatening national security operations and privacy protections. This incident follows the widespread Salt Typhoon campaign that compromised major U.S. telecom providers including AT&T, Verizon, Lumen, Charter Communications, and Windstream, affecting over 80 countries.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
74% of sources are High Factuality

39 Articles •
Leaked Messages Suggest Ties Between Brazilian Arrested Banker, Senior Officials
Left 31%
Center 38%
Right 31%
What happened: Supreme Court Justice André Mendonça ordered the arrest of Banco Master owner Daniel Vorcaro on Wednesday as part of Operation Compliance Zero, alleging multibillion-real fraud involving fake credit titles, bribery of Central Bank officials Paulo Souza and Belline Santana, and operating a private militia that planned to assault journalist Lauro Jardim. Authorities executed four arrest warrants and 15 searches across São Paulo and Minas Gerais, freezing R$22 billion in assets.
Why it matters: The scandal threatens institutional trust as senior Central Bank regulators allegedly advised the banker while overseeing his operations, and Banco Master's collapse has already cost Brazil's deposit insurance fund R$40 billion—one-third of its resources—with larger banks bearing the financial burden. The case also converges with two other major investigations touching both sides of Brazil's political divide just seven months before the October presidential election.
79% of sources are Original Reporting

175 Articles •
Hungary Accused of Taking Ukrainian Bank Staff Hostage After Orbán Threatened by Zelenskyy
Left 33%
Center 34%
Right 33%
What happened: Hungary detained seven Oschadbank employees transporting $40 million, €35 million, and 9kg of gold from Austria to Ukraine on March 5, citing money-laundering suspicions. GPS data shows the seized armoured vehicles near Hungarian security services in central Budapest, while Ukraine calls the detentions hostage-taking.
Why it matters: The incident escalates a bitter dispute over the Druzhba pipeline, offline since January 27 after Russian strikes, which supplies Russian oil to Hungary and Slovakia. Hungary has retaliated by vetoing €90 billion in EU loans for Ukraine, blocking sanctions on Russia, and threatening to stop transit shipments crucial for Ukraine.
71% of sources are Original Reporting
Daily Briefing
Iran disinfo campaigns; Russia providing intel to Iran; a potential breach in FBI wiretap service


8 Articles •
China to Power Up World's First Accelerator-Driven Nuclear Reactor in 2027
Left 33%
Center 67%
What's happening: China is installing final components of the world's first megawatt-level accelerator-driven subcritical system in Guangdong province, with operations set to begin in 2027. The facility uses a superconducting particle accelerator firing proton beams at lead-bismuth to generate neutrons that transmute long-lived nuclear waste while producing power.
Why it matters: This technology could reduce nuclear waste hazard lifespans from 100,000 years to just 300 years while eliminating meltdown risks through its subcritical design. If successful, the system promises safer nuclear energy and efficient waste management, potentially providing stable power for centuries while addressing two major barriers to nuclear adoption.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting
63% of sources are High Factuality

19 Articles •
UK Surgeon Performs First Remote Robotic Surgery From 1,500 Miles Away
L 20%
Center 40%
Right 40%
What happened: Professor Prokar Dasgupta performed the UK's first long-distance robotic prostate surgery from London on patient Paul Buxton, 62, in Gibraltar on February 11, controlling a four-armed robot over 1,500 miles away with only a 0.06-second delay. A second procedure on a 52-year-old man followed on March 4, with another livestreamed operation planned for March 14 before 20,000 surgeons.
Why it matters: Remote robotic surgery could eliminate the expense and inconvenience of traveling for specialist care, particularly benefiting patients in remote areas like Gibraltar who currently must fly to London or Madrid for complex procedures. The technology may help reduce NHS waiting lists and expand access to top surgeons anywhere, with the NHS planning to increase robotic procedures from 70,000 to 500,000 annually over the next decade.
79% of sources are Original Reporting

49 Articles •
Iran's AI Disinformation Campaign Surges, Report Finds
L 23%
Center 57%
R 20%
What happened: Over the past week, millions of misleading videos and AI-generated images falsely depicting strikes in Israel and Iran have flooded X, TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube. Many viral clips showing Tel Aviv attacks are AI-generated, repurposed footage from Algeria and video games like Arma 3 and War Thunder, or out-of-context images—some viewed over 7 million times before removal.
Why it matters: This disinformation surge risks distorting your understanding of the conflict, as pro-Iran accounts spread false narratives to demoralize audiences and claim military victories. X announced March 3 it will suspend accounts from revenue-sharing for 90 days if they post undisclosed AI war content, but experts warn automated verification tools like Grok have failed, incorrectly validating fake videos as real.
90% of sources are Original Reporting
71% of sources are High Factuality

100 Articles •
Russia Sharing Intelligence with Iran to Target US Forces, Officials Say
Left 31%
Center 26%
Right 43%
What happened: Russia is providing Iran with detailed targeting intelligence on US military positions, including warships and aircraft locations across the Middle East. An Iranian drone strike in Kuwait killed six US service members on Sunday, while Iran has launched thousands of drones and hundreds of missiles at US facilities.
Why it matters: This marks the first clear indication that a nuclear-armed US adversary is indirectly involved in the expanding Middle East conflict by helping target American forces. Military analysts note Iran's strikes show unusual precision, suggesting access to Russia's advanced satellite and battlefield intelligence developed during the Ukraine war.
96% of sources are Original Reporting

57 Articles •
FBI Confirms Cyber Breach on Wiretap Surveillance Network
L 20%
Center 73%
7%
What happened: The FBI began investigating suspicious activity on Feb. 17 targeting an internal system used to manage wiretaps, foreign intelligence surveillance warrants, and pen-register data containing personally identifiable information. Hackers used sophisticated techniques, including leveraging a commercial internet service provider's infrastructure to exploit FBI network security controls.
Why it matters: The breach could expose surveillance data from ongoing investigations and personally identifiable information, threatening national security operations and privacy protections. This incident follows the widespread Salt Typhoon campaign that compromised major U.S. telecom providers including AT&T, Verizon, Lumen, Charter Communications, and Windstream, affecting over 80 countries.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
74% of sources are High Factuality

39 Articles •
Leaked Messages Suggest Ties Between Brazilian Arrested Banker, Senior Officials
Left 31%
Center 38%
Right 31%
What happened: Supreme Court Justice André Mendonça ordered the arrest of Banco Master owner Daniel Vorcaro on Wednesday as part of Operation Compliance Zero, alleging multibillion-real fraud involving fake credit titles, bribery of Central Bank officials Paulo Souza and Belline Santana, and operating a private militia that planned to assault journalist Lauro Jardim. Authorities executed four arrest warrants and 15 searches across São Paulo and Minas Gerais, freezing R$22 billion in assets.
Why it matters: The scandal threatens institutional trust as senior Central Bank regulators allegedly advised the banker while overseeing his operations, and Banco Master's collapse has already cost Brazil's deposit insurance fund R$40 billion—one-third of its resources—with larger banks bearing the financial burden. The case also converges with two other major investigations touching both sides of Brazil's political divide just seven months before the October presidential election.
79% of sources are Original Reporting

175 Articles •
Hungary Accused of Taking Ukrainian Bank Staff Hostage After Orbán Threatened by Zelenskyy
Left 33%
Center 34%
Right 33%
What happened: Hungary detained seven Oschadbank employees transporting $40 million, €35 million, and 9kg of gold from Austria to Ukraine on March 5, citing money-laundering suspicions. GPS data shows the seized armoured vehicles near Hungarian security services in central Budapest, while Ukraine calls the detentions hostage-taking.
Why it matters: The incident escalates a bitter dispute over the Druzhba pipeline, offline since January 27 after Russian strikes, which supplies Russian oil to Hungary and Slovakia. Hungary has retaliated by vetoing €90 billion in EU loans for Ukraine, blocking sanctions on Russia, and threatening to stop transit shipments crucial for Ukraine.
71% of sources are Original Reporting