Japan’s Minister for Digital Transformation Hisashi Matsumoto has declared the nation will become the easiest place in the world to develop AI apps, thanks to legal changes that mean organizations won’t need to secure consent to use some personal information.
“Сurrent laws represent a very big obstacle to the development, and utilization of AI in Japan. We must prevent this from happening,” — he said.
Japan’s government approved amendments to the nation’s Personal Information Protection Act that remove the requirement for opt-in consent before sharing personal data. The changes only apply to data that poses little risk of infringing individuals’ rights, and when developers use it to compile statistics for research purposes. Even health-related data comes under the amendments, if it can improve public health.
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What you’re seeing isn’t one event or one headline. It’s a process.
You start noticing patterns. And what looked random… starts to feel structured. 🧩
If it feels like something doesn’t add up — you’re not imagining it. The question is: ignore it… or start looking deeper?
We break down how these shifts actually work — and why they almost never look obvious in real time.
And if you’re ready to go further → @QSITrainingBot
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This Is Why Everything Feels Wrong Right Now
It’s easy right now to feel like it’s already too late to understand what’s happening.
Like everything important already happened… and it just passed you by.
That’s usually the moment when things are only starting to come together.
What you’re seeing isn’t…
Like everything important already happened… and it just passed you by.
That’s usually the moment when things are only starting to come together.
What you’re seeing isn’t…
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The secret technology uses long-range quantum magnetometry to find the electromagnetic fingerprint of a human heartbeat and pairs the data with AI software to isolate the signature from background noise. It was the tool’s first use in the field by the spy agency — and was alluded by President Trump and CIA Director John Ratcliffe at a White House briefing.
“The name is deliberate,” — one source said. “‘Murmur’ is a clinical term for a heart rhythm. ‘Ghost’ refers to finding someone who, for all practical purposes, has disappeared.”
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The Massachusetts House of Representatives voted 129-25 to pass legislation that would ban all kids under age 14 from using social media in the state. The ban would impact all kids under age 14. Kids ages 14 and 15 would need parental consent to use social media.
The bill also calls for a statewide ban on cellphones in schools, which was passed by the Senate last summer. The Attorney General's office is tasked with implementing the social media ban starting October 1, 2026.
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A growing number of regulated financial institutions — Franklin Templeton, PayPal, WisdomTree, MoneyGram — have chosen the Stellar network for settlement, tokenized assets, and global payments.
This report examines the Stellar network's settlement efficiency, institutional asset issuance, and protocol-native compliance primitives for payment networks, asset managers, fintech builders, and institutions evaluating the tokenized asset and settlement opportunity on Stellar.
Allium's report is structured for four institutional decision-maker profiles. Each section includes targeted takeaways.
The onchain evidence presented in this report supports a clear thesis: Stellar has evolved from a cross-border payments protocol into institutional-grade financial infrastructure supporting settlement, tokenized assets, and programmable compliance.
#Stellar
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A top Bitcoin developer has built something the community has debated for years but never actually produced: a way to rescue ordinary wallets if the network is ever forced to defend itself against a quantum computer.
Olaoluwa "Roasbeef" Osuntokun, chief technology officer at Lightning Labs, unveiled the working prototype to the Bitcoin developer mailing list. The tool targets a specific and uncomfortable flaw in Bitcoin's long-term defense plan, a widely discussed "emergency brake" upgrade designed to protect the network from quantum attacks could also lock millions of users out of their own funds. Osuntokun's proposal is an escape hatch.
The system would let users of vulnerable Taproot and other modern wallets prove they created a wallet using its secret seed, without revealing that seed, providing a backup way to access funds if traditional digital signatures are disabled.
The prototype is already functional. Running on a high-end consumer MacBook, generating the proof took about 55 seconds, while verification took under two seconds. The resulting proof file was roughly 1.7 MB, about the size of a high-resolution image.
Osuntokun said the system was built as a side project and remains unoptimized. But the prototype closes a gap that had lingered in theory: how to protect Bitcoin from a future threat without the collateral damage of locking users out of their wallets.
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Beijing stands ready to work with North Korea to further improve ties, after they cooled following the COVID pandemic, which froze exchanges, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said.
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Starting today, Family Plan managers will be able to switch video content on or off for any plan members through their subscription settings. All Premium and Basic users — whether on Individual, Duo, Family, or Student plans — and all users on free service can control how video appears in their app. The settings update will begin rolling out to all users globally this month.
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Argentina’s Congress approved legislation that authorises mining in ecologically sensitive areas of glaciers and permafrost. The Chamber of Deputies approved the amendment with 137 votes in favour, 111 against and 3 abstentions.
The amendment to Glacier Law would make it easier to mine for metals such as copper, lithium and silver in frozen parts of the Andes mountains. Environmentalists say the reforms will weaken protections for crucial water sources.
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"Europe is assuming a greater and fairer share of the task of providing for its conventional defense, and from that there will be no going back, nor should there be. This is a move from unhealthy codependence to a transatlantic alliance grounded in true partnership," — Mark Rutte said.
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Jeff Thornburg helped turn a government research project into SpaceX’s most powerful rocket engine. Now, he’s trying to do the same thing at his startup Portal Space Systems, which is taking an idea set aside by NASA and turning it into high-powered propulsion for the next generation of spacecraft.
The company is developing a technology called solar thermal propulsion. Today’s standard satellite engines either burn chemical fuel or convert the sun’s energy to electricity, using that to power efficient but low-powered thrusters. Portal’s engines would instead concentrate the heat of the sun, using that to heat propellant and move the spacecraft along at high speed.
The technology has been the subject of investigation in government research labs since the 1960s, most recently as a concept for sending a probe into interstellar space, but has yet to make it into orbit. Thornburg, along with co-founders Ian Vorbach and Prashaanth Ravindran, plans to change that in the next two years.
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Banks, asset managers, and financial services companies want to use blockchain. Yet, many haven't been able to make the leap yet. Why?
It’s not because the technology doesn't work. It’s because the technology wasn't built for how they actually operate.
➠ Institutions need privacy and control to move onchain.
On Stellar, asset issuers can access and configure these controls that have been built into the protocol since its early days — native features. They're actually used by companies like PayPal, who conducted a large-scale onchain clawback operation in early 2026, demonstrating active use of the compliance functionality.
➠ But compliance isn't just about what you can do with assets — it's about how you keep them separated.
On Stellar, different assets on the same network can operate under different compliance regimes. Transactions cost less than a penny, so creating that segregation is simple. The tech is there.
➠ What's immutable on the blockchain is the history. 📜
"The long-term winners won't be the chains that control everything from the top down. They'll be the open networks where issuers, regulators, and validators set the rules together," — said said Denelle Dixon, CEO and Executive Director of the Stellar Development Foundation.
#Stellar
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Tehran has signaled that payments in digital currency should form part of any toll system for vessels passing through the Strait of Hormuz — tokens cannot be easily confiscated under sanctions.
“There are reports that Iran is charging fees to tankers going through the Hormuz Strait,” — Donald Trump warned Iran against charging tolls on vessels. “They better not be and, if they are, they better stop now!”
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Lawmakers granted final, unanimous approval to the 131-article bill. The legislation offers legal guarantees and a more flexible tax regime to international investors, particularly from the US.
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Instagram is expanding its revamped Teen Accounts, inspired by 13+ movie ratings criteria and parent feedback — teens will see content on Instagram that’s similar to what they’d see in an age-appropriate movie by default. There's also a new setting called “Limited Content” that has stricter content filters. The company would show less content with themes like extreme violence, sexual nudity, and graphic drug use.
Users now have the option to edit comments, which is a long-awaited fix for anyone who’s ever had to delete and re-post a comment just to fix a typo. But there's only 15-minute window after posting to make changes.
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