Daily articles on what's actually happening in the world β geopolitics, business, finance, science β paired with SAT-style quizzes and an AI tutor.
China just blocked Meta from buying an AI startup that isn't even Chinese anymore β a $2bn shot across Silicon Valley's bow weeks before Trump and Xi sit down to talk.
A miracle drug that helps millions lose weight is colliding with a brutal corporate reality: somebody has to pay for it, and employers are increasingly saying 'not us.'
For ten years, the UAE quietly capped its own oil production to keep Saudi Arabia solvent. Then a war with Iran exposed the bill β and Abu Dhabi decided it was done paying.
What if you could place a bet on a secret military raid β and win big because you knew it was coming? That's exactly the fear haunting Polymarket right now.
Two hundred years ago, only 12% of adults could read β and as literacy spread, human brains physically rewired. AI may be the next rewiring, except it's happening at warp speed.
A 109-year-old Japanese company famous for high-tech toilets just became one of the year's hottest AI stocks β without making a single chatbot, GPU, or data center.
An AI model costing four cents per task is about to vaporize $2.85 billion in human labor β and the company selling that AI captures less than 1% of the value it destroys.
Imagine paying your boss a million rubles just to get medical leave after being shot. For Russian soldiers in Ukraine, that's not a metaphor β it's the price list.
Imagine if every app on your phone was as disposable as a Shein top β built in an afternoon, worn for a season, then replaced without a second thought. That world is arriving now.
Imagine cheating on a test by secretly photographing every answer the smartest kid writes β then selling your knockoff version for a tenth of the price. That's what the White House just accused China of doing to American AI.