SCIENCE

Apr 19 2026TECHNOLOGY

Tinder steps up against fake profiles with eye scans

Dating apps have a big problem with bots posing as real people. Now Tinder is trying something new to fix that. Instead of just trusting users to say they're real, it wants proof. Eye scans can show someone is human, not software. Other companies are also fighting fake accounts this way. Over $300 m

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Apr 19 2026FINANCE

Electric Car Battery Giant Hits New Highs as Analysts Stay Bullish

Chinese battery maker CATL just reported its latest earnings—and the numbers are big. In the first three months of this year, the company pulled in over HK$129 billion in sales, pushing its profit past HK$20 billion. That’s a huge jump from last year, when it earned just HK$84 billion and kept HK$14

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Apr 19 2026TECHNOLOGY

Vivo’s Monster Phone Battery: What’s Hidden Inside the 10, 000mAh Claim

Battery sizes in phones keep getting bigger, but Vivo just jumped way ahead. A tipster shared on Weibo in early 2026 that the company is testing a phone packing a 10, 000mAh battery—the biggest yet in a smartphone that still fits in your pocket. Most phones max out around 5, 000mAh, so this is a hug

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Apr 19 2026LIFESTYLE

Zodiac Check-In: How Taurus Season Shapes Your Next Steps

April 19th marks the start of Taurus season—a time when practicality takes center stage. Instead of chasing quick wins, the focus turns to lasting foundations. Routines, finances, and personal values feel more important now. Small, steady efforts add up faster than bursts of speed. Think of it like

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Apr 18 2026ENVIRONMENT

Data Centers in Virginia: A Hidden Health Cost

Virginia hosts the world’s biggest cluster of data centers, a stretch known as “Data Center Alley. ” The region grew because it sits close to Washington, D. C. , offers cheap land, and has long‑standing tax breaks. Today, most of these facilities are in Loudoun, Prince William and Fairfax counties,

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Apr 18 2026HEALTH

Ambulances Under Fire: A Tale of Medics in Conflict

In the quiet hours before noon, two ambulances came to a halt outside Mayfadoun, a village in southern Lebanon. Earlier that day, news had spread that Israel had struck two other ambulances—one hit first, then the second as it arrived to help. The medics did not wait; they rushed to the scene, fully

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Apr 18 2026POLITICS

Doctors Fight Back in the Midterms

A group of more than thirty doctors, nurses and other health experts have entered this year’s congressional races. They say they want to stop what they see as the Trump and Kennedy administrations’ harmful health policies, such as cutting Medicare and ending federal insurance subsidies. Some of them

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Apr 18 2026POLITICS

Gosar’s Health in the Spotlight: A Fresh Look

The recent appearance of Representative Paul Gosar at a political rally has sparked new online chatter about his well‑being. The event took place in north Phoenix, where Gosar joined former President Donald Trump to rally support for Republican candidates heading into the mid‑term elections. He urge

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Apr 18 2026POLITICS

New Lawyer Joins Probe of Former CIA Head

The U. S. Justice Department has added a former attorney from President Trump’s team to the investigation of ex‑CIA chief John Brennan. The move comes after a senior prosecutor in Miami stepped away from the case, sparking questions about the pace of the inquiry. Brennan, a frequent commentator on c

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Apr 18 2026EDUCATION

Why Debate Matters in School

Debate is not just a classroom game; it is the engine of learning. When people argue, they practice thinking. They test ideas and grow wiser. In the past, a famous scholar named W. E. B. DuBois wrote a book for an American group that wanted people to value all cultures. He was one of the first b

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