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X's AI Labeling Policy Faces Enforcement Crisis as Iran Conflict Rages
X AI Policy
High

X's AI Labeling Policy Faces Enforcement Crisis as Iran Conflict Rages

6 predicted events · 5 sources

within 1 week
within 2-3 weeks
about 4 hours ago
Hormuz Convoy Plan Faces Implementation Hurdles Despite Trump Vow
Strait of Hormuz Crisis
Medium

Hormuz Convoy Plan Faces Implementation Hurdles Despite Trump Vow

6 predicted events · 11 sources

within 2 weeks
within 3-4 weeks
about 4 hours ago
Horoscope Content Surge Signals Seasonal Astrology Trend
Astrology Publishing Patterns
High

Horoscope Content Surge Signals Seasonal Astrology Trend

5 predicted events · 12 sources

within 2 weeks
within 3 weeks
about 4 hours ago
Google Faces AI Safety Reckoning as Gemini Wrongful Death Suit Unfolds
AI Safety Litigation
High

Google Faces AI Safety Reckoning as Gemini Wrongful Death Suit Unfolds

8 predicted events · 6 sources

within 3 months
within 1 month
about 5 hours ago
Meta Faces Regulatory Crackdown as Privacy Scandals Mount
Meta Privacy Crisis
High

Meta Faces Regulatory Crackdown as Privacy Scandals Mount

8 predicted events · 6 sources

within 6 weeks
within 3 months
about 16 hours ago
West African Governments Tighten Control Amid Digital Tensions
West African Governance
Medium

West African Governments Tighten Control Amid Digital Tensions

5 predicted events · 5 sources

within 3 months
within 3 months
about 16 hours ago

Relevant Digests

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Weekly All Categories News Digest — Sunday, February 22, 2026
Weekly
All Categories

Weekly All Categories News Digest — Sunday, February 22, 2026

As the Russia-Ukraine conflict reaches day 1,459, Ukrainian resilience remains strong despite brutal winter attacks, whi...

Sun, Feb 22
40 articles · 28 sources

Relevant Timelines

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Timeline: How China's Whole-Process People's Democracy Narrative Unfolded Before the 2026 National People's Congress
Timeline
World

Timeline: How China's Whole-Process People's Democracy Narrative Unfolded Before the 2026 National People's Congress

This story chronicles the concentrated media campaign promoting Xi Jinping's concept of 'whole-process people's democrac...

4 days
8 events · 4 major
19 articles
about 5 hours ago
Timeline: Casey Means' Contentious Surgeon General Confirmation Hearing
Timeline
Politics

Timeline: Casey Means' Contentious Surgeon General Confirmation Hearing

Dr. Casey Means, a wellness influencer and Stanford-educated physician nominated by President Trump for U.S. Surgeon Gen...

2 days
7 events · 3 major
30 articles
about 5 hours ago
Timeline: How the 2026 Texas Senate Primary Battle Unfolded Over 6 Days
Timeline
World

Timeline: How the 2026 Texas Senate Primary Battle Unfolded Over 6 Days

The 2026 midterm elections kicked off with highly competitive Senate primaries in Texas, where incumbent Republican Sen....

5 days
10 events · 5 major
16 articles
about 21 hours ago
Timeline: Casey Means' Contentious Surgeon General Confirmation Process
Timeline
Politics

Timeline: Casey Means' Contentious Surgeon General Confirmation Process

Dr. Casey Means, a wellness influencer and entrepreneur nominated by President Trump for U.S. Surgeon General, faced int...

2 days
6 events · 3 major
30 articles
3 days ago
Timeline: How the Trump Tariff Refund Battle Unfolded Over 6 Days
Timeline
World

Timeline: How the Trump Tariff Refund Battle Unfolded Over 6 Days

After the US Supreme Court ruled President Trump's global tariffs illegal, a complex legal battle emerged over billions ...

5 days
8 events · 4 major
14 articles
5 days ago
Timeline: Peru's Presidential Crisis - From Jerí's Removal to Balcázar's Appointment in 72 Hours
Timeline
World

Timeline: Peru's Presidential Crisis - From Jerí's Removal to Balcázar's Appointment in 72 Hours

In February 2026, Peru experienced its eighth presidential transition in a decade when Congress removed interim Presiden...

3 days
10 events · 4 major
17 articles
6 days ago
COPPA 2.0 passes the Senate again, unanimously this time
Engadget
about 1 hour ago

COPPA 2.0 passes the Senate again, unanimously this time

Today the US Senate unanimously passed proposed legislation known as COPPA 2.0. This measure, fully named the Children and Teens’ Online Privacy Protection Act, aims to create new protections for younger users online, such as blocking platforms from collecting their personal data without consent.  COPPA 2.0 is a modernized take on the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998, attempting to address recent changes in common online activities, like targeted advertising, that could prove harmful to minors. Lawmakers have made several attempts to get this bipartisan bill through. While it has made varying amounts of headway in the Senate, none of the COPPA 2.0 bills to date have gotten past the House of Representatives. Industry groups such as NetChoice have previously opposed COPPA 2.0 and other measures around minors' online activity such as KOSA, the Kids Online Safety Act. NetChoice members include Google, YouTube, Meta, Reddit, Discord, TikTok and X. "This bill expands the current law protecting our kids online to ensure companies cannot collect personal information from anyone under the age of 17," Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) said in a statement about the latest result. "This is a big step forward for protecting our kids. We hope the House can join us. They haven’t thus far." However, there has been a bigger push both domestically and internationally toward restrictions on when and how younger people engage online. Several states — Utah, California and Washington to name a few — have enacted laws requiring some level of age verification, either to access mature content online or to use social media apps at all. Many of these efforts have raised concerns about privacy regarding where and how people's personal information is stored and protected. COPPA 2.0 might wind up benefitting from the privacy debates since it emphasizes giving teens and parents ways to protect themselves from having their data used against them rather than asking adult

Roku’s solution to streaming decision fatigue is a trivia game
The Verge
about 1 hour ago

Roku’s solution to streaming decision fatigue is a trivia game

Roku users who struggle to figure out what they want to watch might have an answer in the form of "Roklue," a new game coming to the streaming platform on March 7th. Announced on Thursday, Roklue is a pop culture trivia game that Roku says helps users discover new content and "tests players on the movies and TV shows that everyone is talking about, as well as the beloved favorites they want to watch again and again." The first Roklue theme will be "awards season," with "clues inspired by Hollywood's biggest award show moments and celebrated films." Themes for the trivia game will change throughout the year. Users don't need to download any … Read the full story at The Verge.

Amazon is rolling out a redesigned Fire TV app
TechCrunch
about 2 hours ago

Amazon is rolling out a redesigned Fire TV app

With the updated Fire TV app, users can browse and discover content directly from their phone, manage their watchlist on the go, and play titles on their TV from the mobile app.

United Airlines can permanently ban passengers who don’t wear headphones
The Verge
about 2 hours ago

United Airlines can permanently ban passengers who don’t wear headphones

United Airlines has updated its "Contract of Carriage" to include a line that requires passengers to wear headphones while listening to audio and video content on flights, CBS News reports. Under the updated contract, United can "refuse transport on a permanent or temporary basis" to passengers who don't follow a list of rules, which now includes listening to audio without wearing headphones. The policy also states that United can remove those passengers from the aircraft "at any point." United spokesperson Stella Balaskas confirmed in a statement to The Verge that the policy was updated on February 27th, saying, "We've always encouraged … Read the full story at The Verge.

Roku is launching a trivia game called... Roklue?
Engadget
about 4 hours ago

Roku is launching a trivia game called... Roklue?

Who needs Half-Life 3 or Beyond Good & Evil 2? Roku, in an attempt to gamify content discovery on its platform, has cooked up a gaming announcement for the ages. Behold: Roklue. Yes, that's a real name that someone with a job title and (likely high) salary came up with. Roklue (shudder) will quiz players on "the movies and TV shows that everyone is talking about," along with classic "beloved favorites." When it references a movie or show, it will provide a link for you to tune in on your device. The initial version is an Oscar season tie-in ("Roklue: Awards Season") that debuts on Saturday. This inaugural version is produced by B17 Entertainment, a Sony-owned company. Roku says it will rotate thematic content throughout the year. Variety reports that those will center around music festivals, the Emmys and holidays. Apart from that name, which should come with a gag-reflex warning, Roklue sounds harmless enough. You play a trivia game to find new stuff to stream; Roku grows its engagement. Win-win. But with corporate schemes like this, it's always worth wondering where further monetization might eventually come into play. Think something like linking to series on platforms you don't yet subscribe to. (Hello, kickback.) On March 7, you'll find the free Roklue (ick) game on your Roku home screen, no download required. This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/streaming/roku-is-launching-a-trivia-game-called-roklue-190000386.html?src=rss

Meta hit with a class action lawsuit over smart glasses' privacy claims
Engadget
about 4 hours ago

Meta hit with a class action lawsuit over smart glasses' privacy claims

Meta is facing a class action lawsuit for false advertising related to its AI glasses following reports about the company's use of human contractors to review footage captured from users' glasses. The lawsuit, filed Wednesday in federal court in San Francisco, alleges that Meta's claims about the devices' privacy features have misled users.  The lawsuit comes after a Swedish newspaper reported that subcontractors in Kenya have raised concerns about viewing footage recorded via Ray-Ban Meta glasses. According to Svenska Dagbladet, workers have reported witnessing "intimate" material, including bathroom visits, sexual encounters and other private details as part of their job labeling objects in videos captured on users' smart glasses. "This nationwide class action seeks to hold Meta responsible for its affirmatively false advertising and failure to disclose the true nature of surveillance and its connection to the company’s AI data collection pipeline," the lawsuit, filed by Clarkson Law Firm, states. The filing names two individuals who live in California and New Jersey who purchased Meta's smart glasses. It says that both "relied" on Meta's marketing claims about the glasses' privacy protecting features and that they would not have purchased them if they knew about the company's use of contractors. The lawsuit seeks monetary damages and injunctive relief. A spokesperson for Meta confirmed to Engadget that data from its smart glasses can be shared with human contractors in some cases. The company declined to comment on the claims in the lawsuit. "Ray-Ban Meta glasses help you use AI, hands free, to answer questions about the world around you," the spokesperson said. "Unless users choose to share media they've captured with Meta or others, that media stays on the user's device. When people share content with Meta AI, we sometimes use contractors to review this data for the purpose of improving people's experience, as many other companies do. We take steps to filter th

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FinancialContent - The Agentic Era : Meta and Anthropic Advancements Fuel Tech Sector Rebound Amid AI Infrastructure Supercycle
markets.financialcontent.com
about 5 hours ago

FinancialContent - The Agentic Era : Meta and Anthropic Advancements Fuel Tech Sector Rebound Amid AI Infrastructure Supercycle

Published: 20260305T173000Z

FinancialContent - The Great Rotation : Why Global Capital is Deserting US Tech for International Value in 2026
markets.financialcontent.com
about 5 hours ago

FinancialContent - The Great Rotation : Why Global Capital is Deserting US Tech for International Value in 2026

Published: 20260305T173000Z

Roblox is censoring chats with AI
The Verge
about 6 hours ago

Roblox is censoring chats with AI

Roblox is using AI to alter the content of chat messages on its platform in real time using a new feature rolling out today. Real-time chat rephrasing goes beyond the current filtering for banned language, which replaces certain words and phrases with "#" symbols. Now, Roblox says those words and phrases can be "translated into more respectful language that remains closer to the user's original intent." For instance, if a user posts "Hurry TF up!" in chat, Roblox's AI will alter the message to say "Hurry up!" instead. Whenever this happens, Roblox says "everyone in the chat is notified that the text has been rephrased to keep things civil. … Read the full story at The Verge.

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Hong Kong strengthens its role as an international education hub and gateway to the GBA, expanding cross-border learning and research
South China Morning Post
about 7 hours ago

Hong Kong strengthens its role as an international education hub and gateway to the GBA, expanding cross-border learning and research

[The content of this article has been produced by our advertising partner.] Hong Kong takes decisive initiative amid a shifting global higher education landscape as student mobility diversifies beyond traditional destinations and universities forge practice-oriented partnerships and programmes that build cross-border competencies for a fluid global talent market. The city has amplified the “Study in Hong Kong” brand, expanded institutional collaboration, and aligned policy with institutional...

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Prediction markets in the news are a dangerous gamble
The Verge
about 8 hours ago

Prediction markets in the news are a dangerous gamble

Today on Decoder, let’s talk about prediction markets, which continue to insert themselves into the news cycle and the news itself in increasingly weird, unsettling, and potentially illegal ways.  My guest today is Liz Lopatto, senior reporter at The Verge, who owns what we cheerfully call the chaos beat. Liz has been writing a lot about prediction markets lately and especially why they all seem so intent on being perceived as sources of news — a position that directly incentivizes insider trading. That, in turn, creates a long list of very predictable problems. This past weekend, after the United States and Israel went to war with Iran, leading prediction market platforms Kalshi and Polymarket erupted with activity. That included extremely contentious markets around the death of Iran’s supreme leader, and some that appeared to be rife with insider trading from people with advanced knowledge of US military actions. Verge subscribers, don’t forget you get exclusive access to ad-free Decoder wherever you get your podcasts. Head here. Not a subscriber? You can sign up here. In 2026, you can, from the comfort of your couch, wager on when the US will bomb a foreign country. And for Kalshi and Polymarket, that’s quite literally the business model: betting on anything. (After we recorded this episode, Polymarket even briefly featured a wager on whether nuclear war would break out before 2027; the company removed it.) Sports are where these firms make the bulk of their money, which is why both Kalshi and Polymarket are in the crosshairs of so many state gambling authorities. But this industry also thinks of itself as something far grander. Prediction market players want to be the news, and they’ve even devised new, frankly unconvincing frameworks for why they should be considered legitimate sources of information — instead of just anything-goes casinos. Yet more and more, news organizations are taking the bait. Kalshi’s tagline is “trade on what you know.” Polymarket CE

Apple Music can now flag AI content, but only if distributors elect to label it
Engadget
about 10 hours ago

Apple Music can now flag AI content, but only if distributors elect to label it

While music streaming apps like Bandcamp, Spotify and Deezer have taken steps to inform users about AI-generated content, we haven't heard much out of Apple Music in that regard. However, Apple Music has now introduced "Transparency Tags" designed to show listeners if any elements were generated in whole or part by AI. The catch is that Apple is leaving it up to labels and distributors to create those tags, according to an Apple newsletter to industry partners seen by Music Business Worldwide..   "Proper tagging of content is the first step in giving the music industry the data and tools needed to develop thoughtful policies around AI, and we believe labels and distributors must take an active role in reporting when the content they deliver is created using AI," Apple wrote, calling it a concrete first step toward transparency around artificial intelligence. Streaming platforms already use metadata tags for things like song and album titles, genre and the name of the artist. The new tags will now identify any artwork, tracks, compositions and music videos created in whole or in part by AI.  However, Apple's new system requires labels and distributors to opt in and manually flag their use of AI, a system that's similar to what Spotify is doing. On top of that, Apple has no apparent enforcement mechanism for AI content.  By contrast, other music platforms including Deezer and Bandcamp are using in-house AI-detection tools to flag content whether the distributor opts in or not. Deezer disclosed in January 2026 that it receives over 60,000 fully AI-generated tracks every day, double the number it saw in September 2025. Synthetic content, also called "AI slop," has accounted for 13.4 million tracks on its platform, Deezer added. This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/music/apple-music-can-now-flag-ai-content-but-only-if-distributors-elect-to-label-it-121521873.html?src=rss

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Scientists just looked inside Darwin’s 200-year-old specimen jars without opening them
Science Daily
about 17 hours ago

Scientists just looked inside Darwin’s 200-year-old specimen jars without opening them

Scientists have used a laser technique to analyze Charles Darwin’s original Galápagos specimens without opening their nearly 200-year-old jars. By shining light through the glass, the method reveals the chemical makeup of the preservation fluids inside. Researchers successfully identified the contents in most samples, offering new clues about historical preservation practices. The breakthrough could help museums protect millions of delicate specimens without risking damage.

NotebookLM can now summarize research in ‘cinematic’ video overviews
The Verge
1 day ago

NotebookLM can now summarize research in ‘cinematic’ video overviews

Google's NotebookLM can now turn users' research and notes into fully animated "cinematic" videos, going a step further than the original video overview feature Google introduced last year. Previously, video overviews could only generate narrated slideshows, but the upgraded video overview feature uses a combination of Google's AI models, "including Gemini 3, Nano Banana Pro and Veo 3," to generate animated visuals based on the content of users' notes. Google says Gemini "determines the best narrative, visual style and format, and even refines its own work to ensure consistency" when generating the videos. This is the latest in a string o … Read the full story at The Verge.

FinancialContent - Resilience in the Skies and Aisles : Travel and Retail Stocks Surge as Economic Tailwinds Gather Strength
markets.financialcontent.com
1 day ago

FinancialContent - Resilience in the Skies and Aisles : Travel and Retail Stocks Surge as Economic Tailwinds Gather Strength

Published: 20260304T194500Z

FinancialContent - Crypto Equities Ignited as Bitcoin Reclaims $73 , 000 Level ; Coinbase and Galaxy Lead Sector Rally
markets.financialcontent.com
1 day ago

FinancialContent - Crypto Equities Ignited as Bitcoin Reclaims $73 , 000 Level ; Coinbase and Galaxy Lead Sector Rally

Published: 20260304T193000Z

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The Texas Senate Primary Was a Preview of Creator Wars to Come
Wired
1 day ago

The Texas Senate Primary Was a Preview of Creator Wars to Come

After the 2024 election, influencers were seen as an asset. A contentious race between Democrats James Talarico and Jasmine Crockett showed that they can also be a liability.

Beyond the conference — how APAIE 2026 turned international delegates into storytellers
South China Morning Post
1 day ago

Beyond the conference — how APAIE 2026 turned international delegates into storytellers

[The content of this article has been produced by our advertising partner.] Hong Kong stands at the crossroads of global learning and vibrant local culture, offering overseas delegates a compact, layered introduction to what makes the city an enduring magnet for international students. As the lead host of APAIE 2026, The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) curated an immersive programme that moved beyond panel sessions and meetings to reveal the city’s living character. The itinerary stitched...

FinancialContent - Gold Surges to $5 , 178 as Middle East Conflict Escalates Following US - Israeli Strikes
markets.financialcontent.com
1 day ago

FinancialContent - Gold Surges to $5 , 178 as Middle East Conflict Escalates Following US - Israeli Strikes

Published: 20260304T151500Z

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High amounts of sugar found in Nestlé baby cereal sold in Africa
France 24
1 day ago

High amounts of sugar found in Nestlé baby cereal sold in Africa

Swiss food giant Nestlé is facing criticism over the sugar content of Cerelac, its infant cereal brand sold in Africa. An investigation by the NGO Public Eye found that while the product is sold without added sugar in Europe, African versions can contain up to 15 percent sugar.

TikTok won't add end-to-end encryption to DMs
Engadget
1 day ago

TikTok won't add end-to-end encryption to DMs

If you’ve ever wondered if TikTok would ever offer a more secure messaging experience, you now have an answer. TikTok has told the BBC that it will not protect direct messages sent in the app with end-to-end encryption, because it believes it will make users less safe. In a briefing about security at its London office, TikTok said that implementing the technology would prevent its safety teams or law enforcement from being able to read messages if needed. The ByteDance-owned app framed it as a deliberate decision, made in an effort to keep users, especially younger ones, safe on its platform. With end-to-end encryption, only the sender and receiver are able to read messages exchanged between them. The technology isn’t typically implemented in China, where ByteDance is located, though TikTok didn’t say whether its parent company had an influence on its decision. TikTok said messages sent through its app are still protected by standard encryption and only authorized employees will be able to access them if the app gets a request from authorities or gets user reports for harmful behavior. You have a lot of other apps to choose from if you want to communicate through apps with end-to-end encryption. Apple’s iMessage and Google Messages use the technology, and there’s also Facebook Messenger, WhatsApp, Telegram and Signal. It looks like TikTok just isn’t the place to go if you want to use secure messaging, though it’s unclear if its US entity also shares the same stance. If you’ll recall, TikTok signed a deal to spin off its US business, which is now an entity called the TikTok USDS Joint Venture. A group of non-Chinese investors, including Oracle, purchased an 80 percent stake on the app, while ByteDance retained only a 19.9 percent stake. The entity will be in charge of content moderation in the country and will retrain TikTok’s algorithm on US users’ data. This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/apps/tiktok-wont-add-end-to-end-encryp

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Seoul shares award-winning AI sex crime detection tool for free across South Korea
South China Morning Post
2 days ago

Seoul shares award-winning AI sex crime detection tool for free across South Korea

Seoul will offer its patented artificial intelligence system, which automatically detects and reports sexually exploitative content online, free of charge to institutions across South Korea. The technology, first introduced in 2023, uses 24-hour real-time monitoring to automatically identify unlawful sexual images and videos on illicit websites and social media, request their removal and block re-uploads, according to the Seoul Metropolitan Government on Tuesday. City officials say the first...

Trump Lashes Out at Banks Over Contentious Crypto Bill
Gizmodo
2 days ago

Trump Lashes Out at Banks Over Contentious Crypto Bill

“The Genius Act is being threatened and undermined by the Banks, and that is unacceptable — We are not going to allow it,” the president wrote.

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Meta signs a multimillion dollar AI licensing deal with News Corp
Engadget
2 days ago

Meta signs a multimillion dollar AI licensing deal with News Corp

Meta has signed an AI licensing deal with News Corp that will allow the Meta AI maker to use content from The Wall Street Journal and other brands in its chatbot responses and for training of its AI models. News Corp confirmed to Engadget that it had struck a deal with Meta, but didn't provide specifics on the terms of the arrangement. According to The Wall Street Journal, Meta will pay News Corp. "up to $50 million a year" for a three-year deal that covers content from The Journal, as well as the media giant's other brands in the US and UK.  News Corp previously struck a five-year deal with OpenAI that was valued at around $250 million. During a recent appearance at Morgan Stanley's annual Technology, Media & Telecom (TMT) conference, News Corp CEO Robert Thomson hinted that the media company was in the "advanced stage with other negotiations." He described the company's overall approach to such arrangements as "a woo and a sue" strategy, depending on whether companies want to pay for content or scrape it without permission. "We have what you might call a woo and a sue strategy," he said. "We'll woo you. We'd like you to be our partner. But if you're stealing our stuff, we are going to sue you. So there'll be a discount for those who hand themselves in, and there'll be a penalty for those that resist." Meta didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. But the company, which has been reorganizing its AI teams as it looks to create its next model, has struck a number of licensing deals in recent months. It previously signed multi-year agreements with USA Today, People, CNN, Fox News and other outlets. This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/meta-signs-a-multimillion-dollar-ai-licensing-deal-with-news-corp-234157902.html?src=rss

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