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Latest News

Cisco CEO warns AI surge will create major winners and widespread disruption
AI & Technology

Cisco CEO warns AI surge will create major winners and widespread disruption

Cisco’s CEO says the current rush into AI will produce a small set of dominant firms and significant market casualties, urging firms and governments to prepare for workforce shifts and rising cyber risk. He pointed to tangible infrastructure demand — more than a billion pounds of orders in a quarter — while calling for collaborative policy work and stronger defensive architectures.

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Atlantic Trade Realignment Is Reshaping EV Supply Chains and Bypassing the United States

Atlantic Trade Realignment Is Reshaping EV Supply Chains and Bypassing the United States

Chinese EV makers and their suppliers are deliberately localizing production across Europe, Latin America and parts of Africa, knitting shorter, Atlantic-centered supply corridors that cut logistics costs and expand regional manufacturing. That reorientation compounds China’s upstream scale advantages and poses a policy challenge for the U.S., which risks losing leverage in clean-technology standards and high-value production unless it coordinates industrial policy, skills investment and targeted incentives.

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NTSB Blames Layered Institutional Failures for Deadly DC Midair Collision
Aerospace & Defense

NTSB Blames Layered Institutional Failures for Deadly DC Midair Collision

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John Deere to Add U.S. Excavator Plant and Indiana Parts Hub, Shifting Output from Japan
Markets & Economy

John Deere to Add U.S. Excavator Plant and Indiana Parts Hub, Shifting Output from Japan

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Intel to match federal $1,000 seed for employees’ children's investment accounts
AI & Technology

Intel to match federal $1,000 seed for employees’ children's investment accounts

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Cybersecurity

SOC Workflows Are Becoming Code: How Bounded Autonomy Is Rewriting Detection and Response

Security operations centers are shifting routine triage and enrichment into supervised AI agents to manage extreme alert volumes, while human analysts retain control over high-risk containment. This architectural change shortens investigation timelines and reduces repetitive workload but creates new governance and validation requirements to avoid costly mistakes and canceled projects.

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Climate & Energy

US Communities Push Back on Power-Hungry AI Hubs, Echoing Bitcoin Mining Conflicts

Communities in multiple US states are increasingly resisting large, power-intensive AI data center projects, raising questions about long-term grid strain and local costs. Industry tracking shows roughly $64 billion in US data center developments have been delayed or blocked, prompting tech firms to adopt new cost-sharing and community engagement tactics.

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Policy & Geopolitics

Zelensky decries drone attack after passenger carriage is struck in Kharkiv region

A Russian drone struck a passenger carriage in Kharkiv region, killing and leaving others missing, while a separate, large wave of drones hit Odesa and damaged distribution nodes and transmission lines, worsening winter outages. Analysts say the pattern targets civilian mobility and energy nodes to maximize disruption, increasing urgent needs for spare transformers, mobile generation and international resilience aid.

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Policy & Geopolitics

Silvercorp closes purchase of Tulkubash–Kyzyltash assets; establishes 70/30 joint venture in Kyrgyzstan

Silvercorp has finalized the acquisition of Chaarat’s Kyrgyz operating vehicle and will convert it into a joint venture with Kyrgyzaltyn, holding 70% and acting as the operator. The company paid $92 million up front and will pay an additional $60 million after obtaining a 30-year mining license extension to 2062.

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Markets & Economy

Shareholders Approve New Gold Sale to Coeur; Deal Set to Close in First Half of 2026

New Gold shareholders voted decisively to approve a transaction that will transfer all New Gold shares to a Coeur Mining subsidiary in exchange for Coeur stock. The deal carries a 0.4959 share exchange ratio and would leave Coeur with roughly 62% ownership of the combined group if it closes in H1 2026, subject to regulatory and court approvals.

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Life Sciences & Health

duBreton pledges on-pack denial of cloning and gene editing after Health Canada approval

duBreton is introducing voluntary on-package statements asserting its pork products are free from cloning and gene-editing, responding to Health Canada’s decision to permit gene-edited meat without mandatory labeling. The company says it will roll the claim out on select organic items and urges federal regulators to require clear labeling across the food system.

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Cybersecurity

Zeron open-sources two frameworks to compute human-aware cyber risk

Zeron has published two open-source specifications—HSES and CRML—to convert human behavior and system state into continuously computable cyber risk signals. The release aims to make risk logic auditable, machine-executable, and capable of incorporating human operational factors into real-time exposure calculations.

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Policy & Geopolitics

Tehran’s Uneasy Calm: Crackdown Aftershocks Meet U.S. Military Pressure

A fragile normality in Tehran masks deep social trauma and heightened military tension after a deadly domestic crackdown and the arrival of U.S. naval forces nearby. The confrontation has compounded an economic collapse marked by a precipitous fall in the rial and widened the gap between public fear of reprisals at home and warnings of external action.

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Markets & Economy

Earnings Reveal Intensifying Battle Between Samsung and SK Hynix for AI Memory Leadership

Quarterly results from South Korea’s top memory makers framed a high-stakes competition to capture AI-focused memory demand, with companies shifting product mix toward HBM and advanced DDR while managing margin pressure in commodity lines. Recent industry moves — including Samsung’s reported progress toward Nvidia sign‑off for next‑gen HBM and competitors’ large capex commitments — add supply and qualification dynamics that will shape pricing, capacity and customer allocations in coming quarters.

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Policy & Geopolitics

Texas pauses hiring of H‑1B visa holders for state agencies and public colleges

Texas has ordered a freeze on hiring foreign nationals on H‑1B visas for roles within state agencies and public higher-education institutions, creating immediate disruption to recruitment and research staffing. The restriction limits state payroll appointments rather than changing federal immigration rules, and it is likely to produce administrative strain, legal challenges, and talent losses for affected campuses and programs.

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Climate & Energy

Federal Judge Revives Martha’s Vineyard Offshore Wind Project After Prior Administration’s Halt

A federal judge has ordered the restart of a major Massachusetts offshore wind project that had been blocked by the previous administration, clearing a legal path forward for construction and power delivery. The ruling reduces regulatory uncertainty for U.S. offshore wind but leaves practical hurdles—timelines, supply chain constraints and potential appeals—still in play.

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Cybersecurity

Study finds popular Chrome add‑ons secretly harvesting clipboards, rerouting searches and mimicking trusted tools

Security researchers found several widely installed Chrome extensions performing undisclosed data collection, search redirection and brand impersonation. The findings include concrete abuse patterns — from covert clipboard siphoning to social‑engineering campaigns that push remote access trojans — underscoring gaps in vetting and the need for quicker detection and takedown.

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Policy & Geopolitics

South Dakota lawmaker reintroduces proposal to let state allocate up to 10% of public funds into Bitcoin

A South Dakota representative filed legislation to permit the State Investment Council to place up to 10% of public assets into Bitcoin, a revival of a prior effort. The proposal arrives amid a patchwork of state-level crypto statutes and lingering federal legal and budget questions about government-held digital assets.

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Policy & Geopolitics

US strikes on suspected drug vessels fail to halt shipments and strain partnerships

A series of US military strikes against suspected narcotics boats in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific have killed scores of people but have not reduced drug flows into the United States. Seizure data and allied responses suggest traffickers adapt quickly while international cooperation and local livelihoods suffer significant collateral damage.

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Policy & Geopolitics

Rwanda Takes UK to Arbitration, Seeks £50m over Abandoned Asylum Pact

Rwanda has initiated formal arbitration against the United Kingdom at The Hague, demanding £50 million after the UK moved to terminate their asylum partnership. The dispute elevates a bilateral migration policy failure into a legal and diplomatic contest with potential financial and reputational consequences for both capitals.

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