Daily Briefing
Hundreds missing in Mediterranean Sea; UK Ukraine defence partnership signed; US Embassy Baghdad under attack;

34 Articles •
DOJ Charges 3 in $2.5B Scheme to Smuggle AI Servers to China
Left 31%
Center 54%
R 15%
What happened: Federal prosecutors yesterday charged three people, including Super Micro co-founder Wally Liaw, with conspiring to smuggle $2.5 billion worth of AI servers containing restricted Nvidia chips to China between 2024 and 2025. The alleged scheme used shell companies, falsified documents, and dummy servers staged for inspections while real equipment was transshipped through Southeast Asia to conceal the final Chinese destination.
Why it matters: The case highlights how U.S. export controls on advanced AI technology face enforcement challenges as China seeks chips critical to competing in artificial intelligence development. Super Micro shares fell 8-14% after hours, and the prosecution signals escalating government scrutiny of semiconductor supply chains that could affect tech companies and investors with China exposure.
65% of sources are High Factuality

24 Articles •
Walmart Secures AI Pricing Patents as States Move to Ban Algorithmic Grocery Costs
Left 43%
Center 57%
The details: Walmart is installing electronic shelf labels at all 4,600 U.S. stores within the next year, replacing paper tags with AI-linked digital displays that update prices in minutes instead of days. The labels connect wirelessly to a central system, illuminate with LED lights to help employees locate items for restocking and online orders, and are part of a billion-dollar contract with VusionGroup.
Why it matters: The rollout has sparked national debate over potential surge pricing, with unions and lawmakers in seven states pushing legislation to ban electronic shelf labels or dynamic pricing in grocery stores. Walmart insists it maintains consistent prices for all customers regardless of time or demand, that labels run on a closed system without collecting shopper data, and that recently granted AI pricing patents support employee decisions rather than automated price changes.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
88% of sources are Original Reporting

16 Articles •
OpenAI Plans Desktop 'Superapp' Merging ChatGPT, Codex, and Browser
L 16%
Center 69%
R 15%
What happened: OpenAI is consolidating its ChatGPT interface, Codex coding assistant, and Atlas browser into one unified desktop application. CEO of Applications Fidji Simo admitted in an internal memo that product fragmentation has slowed progress and hurt quality standards.
Why it matters: Users currently managing multiple OpenAI desktop apps will get a streamlined single interface for conversations, coding, and browsing. The consolidation follows a period of rapid product launches and comes as OpenAI prepares for a potential IPO while competing with Anthropic's focused approach.
94% of sources are Original Reporting

60 Articles •
White House Registers Alien.gov and Aliens.gov Amid UFO File Push
Left 31%
Center 33%
Right 36%
What happened: The federal government registered Alien.gov and Aliens.gov on March 17 through CISA under the Executive Office of the President, shortly after President Trump ordered agencies to release files on UFOs, UAPs, and extraterrestrial life. The domains are hosted on Cloudflare but remain dormant with no active websites or official explanation from the White House or Pentagon.
Why it matters: If activated, these domains could become a central hub for declassified UAP records and public reporting, potentially transforming government transparency on UFOs and extraterrestrial phenomena. The registrations have already amplified public speculation and debate about what information the government may release, though officials remain silent on the domains' intended purpose.
65% of sources are Original Reporting

42 Articles •
FBI Is Buying Americans' Location Data, Director Patel Tells Senate
Left 31%
Center 52%
R 17%
What happened: FBI Director Kash Patel confirmed yesterday that the agency purchases commercially available location data from private brokers to track people's movements without obtaining warrants. Defense Intelligence Agency Director James Adams also acknowledged his agency buys such data, despite 2018 Supreme Court precedent requiring warrants for carrier-held location data.
Why it matters: Your location history from phone apps and games can be purchased by federal agencies without judicial oversight, bypassing constitutional warrant requirements. Bipartisan legislation introduced last week would close this data broker loophole and require warrants, potentially restoring privacy protections for all Americans' personal information.
95% of sources are Original Reporting

42 Articles •
Platypus Fur Contains Hollow Melanosomes Never Seen in Mammals
L 18%
Center 56%
Right 26%
The discovery: Ghent University researchers found that platypus hair contains hollow, spherical melanosomes—pigment structures previously seen only in birds. Using electron microscopy on 12 platypuses, they confirmed this trait appears in no other mammal among 126 species studied, including the platypus's closest relative, the echidna.
Why it matters: This finding challenges the 50-year scientific assumption that mammalian melanosomes are always solid, raising new questions about vertebrate evolution and color production. Researchers speculate the hollow structures may relate to aquatic insulation, though the functional benefit remains unclear and requires further study.

293 Articles •
Iran Strikes Gulf Energy Sites Amid Hormuz Shutdown
Left 26%
Center 50%
R 24%
What happened: Iranian missile and drone attacks hit Qatar's Ras Laffan LNG facility, refineries in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, and gas sites in Abu Dhabi this week, retaliating for Israeli strikes on Iran's South Pars gas field. The Strait of Hormuz has been effectively shut since February 28, blocking roughly 20 percent of global oil flows and sending Brent crude prices above $115 per barrel.
Why it matters: Average US gas prices jumped to $3.48 per gallon from under $3 last week, costing typical households an extra $450 annually for every sustained $10-per-barrel oil increase. Europe's natural gas prices surged over 50 percent since the war began, threatening higher inflation globally and forcing central banks to reconsider interest rate cuts as fertilizer shipments to farmers worldwide have been disrupted.
64% of sources are Original Reporting

24 Articles •
Report Reveals North Korea's 100,000 Fake IT Workers Earn $500M a Year
Left 38%
Center 62%
The details: A joint IBM X-Force and Flare Research investigation reveals North Korea operates a centrally organized program placing roughly 100,000 fake IT workers across 40 countries, generating approximately $500 million annually for the regime. Workers use AI-generated photos, fabricated GitHub profiles, and VPNs to secure remote positions, with some earning up to $300,000 yearly while funneling proceeds back to Pyongyang to fund weapons programs and evade sanctions.
What it means: Your company may already employ North Korean operatives without knowing it, as CrowdStrike identified a 220% rise in fraudulent hires in 2025. Beyond financial losses, these workers have stolen sensitive U.S. military technology and cryptocurrency, extorted companies for hundreds of thousands of dollars, and obtained access to government facilities, making rigorous identity verification and monitoring of remote employees essential for organizational security.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
88% of sources are Original Reporting

10 Articles •
Ancient Antarctic Ice Reveals Ocean Heat Drove Climate Shifts
Left 33%
Center 67%
The discovery: Two research teams analyzed ice cores from Antarctica's Allan Hills dating back 3.1 million years, finding that ocean cooling—not greenhouse gas changes—accompanied major climate transitions including the Plio-Pleistocene shift 2.7 million years ago. Using novel noble-gas thermometry techniques, scientists reconstructed ocean temperatures while CO2 and methane remained broadly stable across this period.
Why it matters: Today's CO2 levels are rising far faster and higher—150 ppm above pre-industrial versus a 25 ppm ancient decline—than anything in these 3-million-year records. The research shows climate can cross irreversible thresholds on human timescales, underscoring risks as current greenhouse gas increases dwarf natural variations and push Earth into uncharted territory.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
90% of sources are Original Reporting
Daily Briefing
Hundreds missing in Mediterranean Sea; UK Ukraine defence partnership signed; US Embassy Baghdad under attack;


34 Articles •
DOJ Charges 3 in $2.5B Scheme to Smuggle AI Servers to China
Left 31%
Center 54%
R 15%
What happened: Federal prosecutors yesterday charged three people, including Super Micro co-founder Wally Liaw, with conspiring to smuggle $2.5 billion worth of AI servers containing restricted Nvidia chips to China between 2024 and 2025. The alleged scheme used shell companies, falsified documents, and dummy servers staged for inspections while real equipment was transshipped through Southeast Asia to conceal the final Chinese destination.
Why it matters: The case highlights how U.S. export controls on advanced AI technology face enforcement challenges as China seeks chips critical to competing in artificial intelligence development. Super Micro shares fell 8-14% after hours, and the prosecution signals escalating government scrutiny of semiconductor supply chains that could affect tech companies and investors with China exposure.
65% of sources are High Factuality

24 Articles •
Walmart Secures AI Pricing Patents as States Move to Ban Algorithmic Grocery Costs
Left 43%
Center 57%
The details: Walmart is installing electronic shelf labels at all 4,600 U.S. stores within the next year, replacing paper tags with AI-linked digital displays that update prices in minutes instead of days. The labels connect wirelessly to a central system, illuminate with LED lights to help employees locate items for restocking and online orders, and are part of a billion-dollar contract with VusionGroup.
Why it matters: The rollout has sparked national debate over potential surge pricing, with unions and lawmakers in seven states pushing legislation to ban electronic shelf labels or dynamic pricing in grocery stores. Walmart insists it maintains consistent prices for all customers regardless of time or demand, that labels run on a closed system without collecting shopper data, and that recently granted AI pricing patents support employee decisions rather than automated price changes.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
88% of sources are Original Reporting

16 Articles •
OpenAI Plans Desktop 'Superapp' Merging ChatGPT, Codex, and Browser
L 16%
Center 69%
R 15%
What happened: OpenAI is consolidating its ChatGPT interface, Codex coding assistant, and Atlas browser into one unified desktop application. CEO of Applications Fidji Simo admitted in an internal memo that product fragmentation has slowed progress and hurt quality standards.
Why it matters: Users currently managing multiple OpenAI desktop apps will get a streamlined single interface for conversations, coding, and browsing. The consolidation follows a period of rapid product launches and comes as OpenAI prepares for a potential IPO while competing with Anthropic's focused approach.
94% of sources are Original Reporting

60 Articles •
White House Registers Alien.gov and Aliens.gov Amid UFO File Push
Left 31%
Center 33%
Right 36%
What happened: The federal government registered Alien.gov and Aliens.gov on March 17 through CISA under the Executive Office of the President, shortly after President Trump ordered agencies to release files on UFOs, UAPs, and extraterrestrial life. The domains are hosted on Cloudflare but remain dormant with no active websites or official explanation from the White House or Pentagon.
Why it matters: If activated, these domains could become a central hub for declassified UAP records and public reporting, potentially transforming government transparency on UFOs and extraterrestrial phenomena. The registrations have already amplified public speculation and debate about what information the government may release, though officials remain silent on the domains' intended purpose.
65% of sources are Original Reporting

42 Articles •
FBI Is Buying Americans' Location Data, Director Patel Tells Senate
Left 31%
Center 52%
R 17%
What happened: FBI Director Kash Patel confirmed yesterday that the agency purchases commercially available location data from private brokers to track people's movements without obtaining warrants. Defense Intelligence Agency Director James Adams also acknowledged his agency buys such data, despite 2018 Supreme Court precedent requiring warrants for carrier-held location data.
Why it matters: Your location history from phone apps and games can be purchased by federal agencies without judicial oversight, bypassing constitutional warrant requirements. Bipartisan legislation introduced last week would close this data broker loophole and require warrants, potentially restoring privacy protections for all Americans' personal information.
95% of sources are Original Reporting

42 Articles •
Platypus Fur Contains Hollow Melanosomes Never Seen in Mammals
L 18%
Center 56%
Right 26%
The discovery: Ghent University researchers found that platypus hair contains hollow, spherical melanosomes—pigment structures previously seen only in birds. Using electron microscopy on 12 platypuses, they confirmed this trait appears in no other mammal among 126 species studied, including the platypus's closest relative, the echidna.
Why it matters: This finding challenges the 50-year scientific assumption that mammalian melanosomes are always solid, raising new questions about vertebrate evolution and color production. Researchers speculate the hollow structures may relate to aquatic insulation, though the functional benefit remains unclear and requires further study.

293 Articles •
Iran Strikes Gulf Energy Sites Amid Hormuz Shutdown
Left 26%
Center 50%
R 24%
What happened: Iranian missile and drone attacks hit Qatar's Ras Laffan LNG facility, refineries in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, and gas sites in Abu Dhabi this week, retaliating for Israeli strikes on Iran's South Pars gas field. The Strait of Hormuz has been effectively shut since February 28, blocking roughly 20 percent of global oil flows and sending Brent crude prices above $115 per barrel.
Why it matters: Average US gas prices jumped to $3.48 per gallon from under $3 last week, costing typical households an extra $450 annually for every sustained $10-per-barrel oil increase. Europe's natural gas prices surged over 50 percent since the war began, threatening higher inflation globally and forcing central banks to reconsider interest rate cuts as fertilizer shipments to farmers worldwide have been disrupted.
64% of sources are Original Reporting

24 Articles •
Report Reveals North Korea's 100,000 Fake IT Workers Earn $500M a Year
Left 38%
Center 62%
The details: A joint IBM X-Force and Flare Research investigation reveals North Korea operates a centrally organized program placing roughly 100,000 fake IT workers across 40 countries, generating approximately $500 million annually for the regime. Workers use AI-generated photos, fabricated GitHub profiles, and VPNs to secure remote positions, with some earning up to $300,000 yearly while funneling proceeds back to Pyongyang to fund weapons programs and evade sanctions.
What it means: Your company may already employ North Korean operatives without knowing it, as CrowdStrike identified a 220% rise in fraudulent hires in 2025. Beyond financial losses, these workers have stolen sensitive U.S. military technology and cryptocurrency, extorted companies for hundreds of thousands of dollars, and obtained access to government facilities, making rigorous identity verification and monitoring of remote employees essential for organizational security.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
88% of sources are Original Reporting

10 Articles •
Ancient Antarctic Ice Reveals Ocean Heat Drove Climate Shifts
Left 33%
Center 67%
The discovery: Two research teams analyzed ice cores from Antarctica's Allan Hills dating back 3.1 million years, finding that ocean cooling—not greenhouse gas changes—accompanied major climate transitions including the Plio-Pleistocene shift 2.7 million years ago. Using novel noble-gas thermometry techniques, scientists reconstructed ocean temperatures while CO2 and methane remained broadly stable across this period.
Why it matters: Today's CO2 levels are rising far faster and higher—150 ppm above pre-industrial versus a 25 ppm ancient decline—than anything in these 3-million-year records. The research shows climate can cross irreversible thresholds on human timescales, underscoring risks as current greenhouse gas increases dwarf natural variations and push Earth into uncharted territory.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
90% of sources are Original Reporting