World
AI Summary
- The AI sector is experiencing an intense price war, with Meta launching a paid AI model and SK hynix raising billions in a US listing, signaling a major boom in artificial intelligence technology.
- Geopolitical tensions remain high with escalating strikes between the US and Iran, alongside a new drone threat emerging from Mexico and arrests of foreign spies in the US, underscoring global security concerns.
- Developments in international trade and defense include the US potentially returning Turkey to the F-35 program, Canada's acquisition of German submarines, and significant bids for companies like easyJet, indicating shifts in global economic and military alliances.
- Environmental and health alerts are prominent, with the strongest El Nino in 75 years causing food supply-chain alarms, an 'explosive' diarrhea parasite surge, and ongoing concerns over climate change impacts like wildfires in Spain and extreme weather in China.
- Regulatory and legal battles are unfolding globally, including the EU accusing Meta of mental health risks, Apple challenging EU rules, and debates around government surveillance and election integrity, particularly in the US.
ZeroHedge
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Better Off? How Generational Progress Slowed In The US
an hour ago
by Tyler Durden
Better Off? How Generational Progress Slowed In The US Bettering yourself financially or at least giving your children the opportunity for a more prosperous future has driven people to emigrate to the United States for generations. But is the next generation still better off in this day and age? The answer is yes, but not by that much. At least, as Statista's Katharina Buchholz reports, this is the verdict given in a discussion paper published by the Federal Reserve Board of Washington D.C. in 2024. It concludes that millennials' median household income at 36 to 40 years old was still
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The Men Who Own The Ukraine War Now Run It
2 hours ago
by Tyler Durden
The Men Who Own The Ukraine War Now Run It Authored by Thomas S. Karat via AntiWar.com There was a time when the arms dealer waited in the corridor . He financed the campaign, endowed the think tank, took the general to dinner, and hoped the man inside the office would remember him when the contract came up. The wall between the money and the decision was thin, often corrupt, but it was there . Someone held the public trust, and someone else tried to buy it, and you could at least tell the two apart. That wall is gone
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Europe Votes Against Thought-Policing 'Chat Control', Brussels Passes It Anyway...
3 hours ago
by Tyler Durden
Europe Votes Against Thought-Policing 'Chat Control', Brussels Passes It Anyway... On Thursday in Strasbourg, 314 Members of the European Parliament voted to reject the return of "Chat Control," the legal regime allowing tech companies to scan the private messages of roughly half a billion Europeans. Illustration via proton.me Only 276 voted to keep it. So naturally, the scanning regime won - thanks to a 'quirky' voting procedure in Brussels that allowed legislation to survive even though most MEPs who cast a vote opposed it. That should alarm anyone who still believes the word "parliament" is supposed to mean something. Losing
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Is She Going To Eat It?
4 hours ago
by Tyler Durden
Is She Going To Eat It? Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity News , Migrants continue to treat Britain's streets, parks, and waterways like a personal hunting ground, with fresh footage exposing the grim reality of unchecked mass immigration. A disturbing new video circulating on X shows a woman - widely identified in comments as a migrant - seemingly actively hunting birds. She uses a sheet to capture a seagull perched on a gate or property edge. After securing the bird, she looks around for more prey, scanning the area as if on a deliberate hunt. I DONT WANT PEOPLE
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Erdogan Taunts Israel & Greece After Trump Hands Turkey F-35, Sanctions Win
4 hours ago
by Tyler Durden
Erdogan Taunts Israel & Greece After Trump Hands Turkey F-35, Sanctions Win Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has responded to ongoing Israeli and Greek objections to the possible US sale of F-35 fighter jets to Turkey by mocking the Turkish enemies and rivals. Opposition to the potential stealth fighter transfer raised by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Greece’s Kyriakos Mitsotakis "has no place in my world," Erdogan said in his characteristically bellicose manner. "Hopefully, when the F-35s are delivered to Turkey, the whole world will say America kept its promise ," Erdogan said at a Wednesday closing news conference for
The Guardian
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Developing countries spend more repaying foreign debt than on education, UN reveals
4 hours ago
by Kaamil Ahmed
Global education, Global development, Aid, Debt relief, United Nations, World news, Africa, Education, Schools, Society, Global economy, Economics, Unesco, ChildrenUnesco report shows children lost out to servicing debt in 113 countries, with 18 spending five times more on loans Most developing countries spent less on education than they did repaying debt last year, according to the UN, at the same time as global aid to education is predicted to decline by up to 30%. More was spent on servicing foreign debt than on education in 113 developing countries in 2025, according to research by the UN’s culture and education agency, Unesco. In sub-Saharan Africa, countries spent 3.6 times more on debt than education . Continue reading...
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Furore in Nigeria over fake federal agency set up in government HQ
19 hours ago
by Eromo Egbejule in Abidjan
Nigeria, Africa, World newsPresident orders investigation after fictitious body given funding, triggering renewed scrutiny of alleged corruption A fictitious federal entity that was allocated 1.3bn naira (£700,000) in Nigeria’s 2026 budget has precipitated a political storm in Africa’s largest democracy in the run-up to a general election set for January. The fake agency came to light last October when Femi Gbajabiamila, the president’s chief of staff, wrote to the police alleging that his signature, along with official seals and reference numbers, had been forged by Adeniyi Adeyemi Matthew, who was claiming to have been appointed by the presidency to head the presidential foreign
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LGBTQ+ cruise ship refused entry to Egypt days after Turkey turned it away
a day ago
by Amelia Hill
LGBTQ+ rights, Cruises, World news, Turkey, Egypt, Europe, Africa, Middle East and north AfricaScarlet Lady’s 2,000 passengers told of change as one of those onboard says they will ‘sparkle and spend elsewhere’ An LGBTQ+ cruise ship blocked from Turkish waters this week has been refused entry into Egypt. The Scarlet Lady’s 2,000 passengers, including the Broadway performer Patti LuPone , woke on Thursday morning to find a note placed under their cabin doors informing them that the ship was urgently looking for alternative ports. Continue reading...
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Species’ ingenious survival strategies no match for human destruction, red list reveals
a day ago
by Damian Carrington Environment editor
IUCN red list of endangered species, Endangered species, Endangered habitats, Wildlife, Conservation, Environment, Animals, Marine life, Africa, South Africa, Namibia, Invertebrates, Australia news, World newsNewly endangered animals include desert frogs and snails in extreme ocean depths, both threatened by mining Life has colonised every corner of the planet by evolving ingenious survival strategies but these are increasingly being overwhelmed by destructive human activities, this year’s red list of endangered species has revealed. Many snails, limpets and clams have adapted to life at crushing depths in the oceans on hydrothermal vents where water temperatures can reach 450C (842F). But an assessment for the red list found that two-thirds of the hundreds of mollusc species found only on deep sea vents were at risk of extinction
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Catnip lotion as effective as Deet at repelling mosquitoes, study finds
3 days ago
by Kat Lay Global health correspondent
Global health, Global development, Pesticides, Uganda, Plants, Insects, Environment, Animals, Wildlife, World news, Africa, Farming, Science, CatsResearchers testing a cheap, homegrown oil in Uganda found what cats knew all along – it worked as well as the artificial chemical used globally A homegrown catnip lotion has proven “just as effective as Deet” as a mosquito repellant in trials carried out in Uganda. Catnip, or Nepeta cataria , is a common herb from the mint family. The chemical in the plant that causes feline euphoria – nepetalactone – also has insect-repelling properties but this has not previously been commercialised. Continue reading...
South China Morning Post
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Man nearly sucked out of ‘detached’ window on Ryanair flight
an hour ago
by Agence France-Presse
A man was nearly sucked out of the window of a Ryanair flight when it “detached” mid-air en route to Germany, with other passengers pulling him back inside, witnesses and officials said. The passenger, described as a tourist from Serbia on a flight from Thessaloniki in Greece to Memmingen in Germany, has been hospitalised with friction burns but was otherwise in good condition, authorities said. “Most of us had fallen asleep, we had closed our eyes. There was a noise, like a tyre bursting,” a...
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Greek anti-terror police arrest 3 after car blast kills 1
an hour ago
by Agence France-Presse
Police in Greece on Friday said they had arrested three people in connection to attacks this month that targeted ruling party politicians, killing a woman in a car explosion. Hours later, two more people were held over a 2010 deadly firebomb attack that left three dead. In the recent case, “three individuals have been arrested” by anti-terror police in Thessaloniki and the island of Crete, the police said in a statement. The July 1 attacks at dawn in the northern city of Thessaloniki targeted...
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11 dead, 19 missing as Spain wildfire roars through village
3 hours ago
by Agence France-Presse
Eleven people were killed and 19 are missing after a wildfire tore through a Spanish village, with four victims who may have been British who were burned in their car, authorities said on Friday. Authorities said many of the victims may be foreign tourists visiting Bedar, a small village in Los Gallardos district, but that they were still confirming their identities. They described victims trying to flee the fast-moving blaze through difficult, forested terrain. About 400 firefighters and troops...
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US opens door for Turkey’s return to F-35 stealth jet programme – but Israel’s not happy
3 hours ago
by Tom Hussain
The United States is set to resume military sales to Turkey, Nato’s second-largest military power, after President Donald Trump said sanctions imposed against Ankara over its procurement of Russian air defence systems seven years ago would soon be lifted. “We don’t want to sanction friends,” Trump told journalists at the Nato summit in the Turkish capital on Wednesday, while emphasising his “good chemistry” with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Trump further said he would soon take a final...
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How AI is changing the nature of war and conflict
3 hours ago
by David Dodwell
As US President Donald Trump flew home from a fractious Nato summit in Turkey, he was poised to resume the war with Iran, whose leaders he labelled “sick” and “scum”. Trump also complained about European leaders’ failure to spend enough on arms, support him in Iran and recognise the need for the US to take control of Greenland. The sense of rising global conflict has been palpable this week. What clearly showed at the summit of the transatlantic security alliance was confirmed by the latest...
New York Times
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New Air Force One Lacks Defensive Countermeasures of Previous Model, Officials Say
10 hours ago
by Tyler Pager, Eric Lipton, Adam Goldman, Eric Schmitt and Julian E. Barnes
United States Politics and Government, Airlines and Airplanes, United States Defense and Military Forces, US and Israeli Attack on Iran (2026), Air Force One (Jet), Assassinations and Attempted Assassinations, Boeing Company, Defense Department, United States Air Force, Secret Service, Trump, Donald J, Iran, QatarExperts said the lack of such capabilities poses a potential risk when the president travels overseas. The White House defended the aircraft’s safety.
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How Trump Is Trying to Tip the Scales for the Midterms, and Why Grocery Stores Are Scrambling
an hour ago
by Tracy Mumford, Will Jarvis, Margaret Kadifa, Jake Lucas, Ian Stewart and Nick Corasaniti
United States Politics and Government, Trump, Donald J, Israel, Funk, Wally, Oil (Petroleum) and Gasoline, Prices (Fares, Fees and Rates), Midterm Elections (2026)Plus, the Friday news quiz.
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Iran’s Supreme Leader Remains Absent, a Void at the Top of the Regime
2 hours ago
by Yeganeh Torbati
US and Israeli Attack on Iran (2026), Politics and Government, Economic Conditions and Trends, Funerals and Memorials, United States International Relations, Khamenei, Ali, Khomeini, Ruhollah, Khamenei, Mojtaba (1969- ), Pezeshkian, Masoud, Iran, United StatesAyatollah Mojtaba Khamenei did not appear at his father’s funeral this week, fueling speculation about his physical condition and leaving a power vacuum in a divided country.
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The U.S. and Iran Are Fighting Again. Is the Cease-Fire Over?
9 hours ago
by Eric Schmitt, Gilad Thaler, Jon Miller, Rafaela Balster, Stephanie Swart, Jon Hazell and Whitney Shefte
US and Israeli Attack on Iran (2026), Peace Process, Schmitt, Eric, IranEric Schmitt, a New York Times National Security correspondent, analyzes recent skirmishes between the U.S. and Iran and whether they threaten ongoing negotiations for a peace deal.
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Bombing Iran, Then a Tentative Accord Didn’t Work. Does Trump Have a Plan C?
10 hours ago
by David E. Sanger
US and Israeli Attack on Iran (2026), United States Politics and Government, United States Defense and Military Forces, United States International Relations, Trump, Donald J, Iran, Strait of HormuzThe administration appears to be reverting to an all-stick, no-carrot approach. But it has yet to answer why it believes economic warfare and bombing will yield a different result this time.