GOVERNMENT

Apr 27 2026POLITICS

The Ocean Spill That Sparked Earth Day and a Call for Better Local Leaders

On January 28, 1969 an oil rig off Santa Barbara released over three million gallons of crude into the sea. The disaster killed thousands of birds, dolphins and seals and sent shockwaves through the public conscience. People rallied for change, pushing schools to teach about nature and lawmakers to

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Apr 27 2026OPINION

Why Massachusetts needs smarter license plates now

Back in 1903, Massachusetts became the first state to use license plates, starting with simple numbers when cars were uncommon. Over time, plates grew longer and more complex as car ownership exploded. Today, most plates have six to eight random letters and numbers—like "7KQX29"—which might seem fin

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Apr 27 2026ENTERTAINMENT

A Government Official Checks Out the Big Esports Event

Government leaders don’t usually visit esports events, but recently one showed up to see what all the excitement was about. A cabinet minister toured Inspire Arena in Incheon during a major competition held in a 2026 league home ground. The purpose wasn’t just to observe; the official wanted to unde

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Apr 27 2026POLITICS

Science Advice Cut Short: What Trump’s Board Purge Means for U. S. Research

The National Science Board, an independent group of 22 top scientists and engineers, lost all its members in one swift move. Each got an email Friday afternoon saying their role was over immediately. No explanation came from the White House, and no word on when replacements might come. Inside the Na

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Apr 26 2026TECHNOLOGY

AI tools and security flaws: a closer look at recent cyber threats

A group of curious internet users found a way into a restricted AI tool called Mythos Preview. They didn’t use advanced hacking skills—just careful detective work. After studying a breach at an AI training company, they guessed where Mythos was hosted and accessed it. They even found other unrelease

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Apr 26 2026POLITICS

Slovenia’s Government Stuck Without a New Leader

Slovenia’s political scene is in a tight spot after the recent elections. The ruling Freedom Movement party won by a razor-thin margin, but the new prime minister hasn’t been chosen. The president refused to pick a candidate because no group could prove it had enough allies to form a stable governme

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Apr 25 2026FINANCE

Brazil Clamps Down on Betting-Linked Trading Sites

Brazil has suddenly blocked popular prediction markets like Kalshi and Polymarket, raising questions about why these sites got caught in the crosshairs. The government claims they were violating betting laws passed by Congress, but critics wonder if the crackdown is really about protecting traders—o

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Apr 25 2026POLITICS

Mysteries Underwater and in the Skies: What’s Really Being Hidden?

A Tennessee congressman recently stirred up conversation by sharing unusual details from classified reports about strange objects in the sky and underwater. While the government now calls them UAPs—unidentified aerial or anomalous phenomena—he described them in vivid terms. One story involved a Navy

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Apr 24 2026HEALTH

Medical research funding delays: how paperwork and politics are stalling breakthroughs

The government agency that hands out most U. S. medical research dollars is running months behind schedule this year. Instead of funding about 4, 000 new projects by late March, it has approved fewer than 2, 000. That shortfall means thousands of scientists are stuck waiting, some projects are pause

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Apr 24 2026TECHNOLOGY

How AI theft puts America's tech edge at risk

America's top AI labs are warning that foreign hackers are quietly draining their most advanced work. Instead of breaking into systems with guns blazing, these attackers use a smarter trick: they steal the output of AI systems to rebuild weaker copies. The process, called "industrial distillation, "

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