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Sino-West trade strains deepen on new tariffs and rules

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Sino-West trade strains deepen on new tariffs and rules

New US tariffs and tougher EU regulations heighten pressure on China, raising the risk of retaliation and broader global trade conflagration.

Mounting trade tensions involving China have become a significant source of concern for the global economy, reflecting a broader trend toward economic nationalism and the increasing use of trade policy as a geopolitical tool.

The latest developments involve proposed new tariffs by the United States and regulatory measures introduced by the European Union, both of which could substantially affect Chinese exports and investment opportunities.

Together, these actions have prompted strong warnings from Beijing and raised the prospect of a wider international trade dispute at a time when global growth remains fragile and supply chains are still adapting to years of disruption.

The most immediate source of concern is the United States Trade Representative’s (USTR) proposal to impose additional tariffs of up to 12.5% on imports from 60 trading partners, including China. The measures are linked to allegations that certain countries have failed to adequately prevent the export of goods associated with forced labor practices.

According to US officials, the objective is to strengthen enforcement of labor standards and ensure that products entering the American market comply with ethical sourcing requirements.

While the proposed tariffs apply to a broad range of countries, China is expected to be among the most affected due to its central role in global manufacturing and the longstanding concerns expressed by US policymakers regarding labor practices in certain regions of the country.

The timing of the proposed US tariffs is particularly significant. Global trade flows have already been affected by ongoing geopolitical tensions, shifts in supply chain strategies and efforts by multinational corporations to diversify production away from single-country dependencies.

Additional tariffs could increase costs for importers and contribute to inflationary pressures in certain sectors. Businesses that rely heavily on Chinese manufacturing inputs may face difficult decisions regarding sourcing strategies, investment planning, and pricing structures.

At the same time, developments in Europe have added another layer of complexity to China’s trade outlook. The European Union recently unveiled two major legislative initiatives: the Industrial Accelerator Act and the Cybersecurity Act.

Although these measures are presented primarily as efforts to strengthen European industrial competitiveness, technological resilience and digital security, they could have significant implications for Chinese firms seeking access to segments of the European market. The legislation reflects growing European concerns regarding strategic dependencies and the security of advanced technologies.

The Industrial Accelerator Act is intended to support the development of key industries within the European Union by streamlining regulatory processes, encouraging investment, and strengthening domestic production capabilities in strategically important sectors.

While the legislation is not explicitly targeted at China, it may create conditions that favor European firms and reduce opportunities for foreign competitors in areas deemed critical to economic security.

Chinese companies that have sought to expand their presence in sectors such as renewable energy, advanced manufacturing, batteries, and telecommunications may encounter increased scrutiny and more challenging market conditions.

Similarly, the Cybersecurity Act is designed to enhance standards for digital infrastructure, data protection and technology procurement across the European Union. These objectives align with broader efforts by European policymakers to reduce vulnerabilities associated with external suppliers of critical technologies.

Chinese technology companies, some of which have already faced restrictions or heightened regulatory oversight in various Western markets, could be disproportionately affected by stricter certification requirements and security reviews. As a result, access to lucrative segments of the European technology market may become increasingly difficult for certain Chinese firms.

Beijing has reacted strongly to both the US tariff proposals and the new EU initiatives. Chinese officials have warned that retaliatory measures remain a possibility if policies perceived as discriminatory are implemented.

Such warnings are consistent with China’s previous responses to foreign trade restrictions, which have often included counter-tariffs, regulatory actions, export controls, or restrictions targeting specific industries and products.

The prospect of retaliation has intensified concerns among investors and policymakers who fear that isolated trade disputes could evolve into a broader cycle of economic confrontation.

A wider trade conflict would carry significant risks for the global economy. China remains one of the world’s largest trading nations and a critical participant in numerous international supply chains. Escalating tensions between China and major Western economies could disrupt trade flows and slow investment activity.

Industries that depend on cross-border production networks, including electronics, automotive manufacturing, renewable energy, pharmaceuticals, and consumer goods, would be particularly vulnerable to increased barriers and uncertainty.

The broader geopolitical context is equally important. Economic relations between China and Western countries are increasingly influenced by strategic considerations that extend beyond purely commercial interests.

Issues such as technological leadership, national security, supply chain resilience, human rights, and industrial competitiveness now play a central role in trade policymaking.

As a result, disputes that might once have been resolved through traditional trade negotiations are becoming more difficult to address because they are intertwined with wider political and security concerns.

The key question ahead is whether policymakers can prevent these tensions from escalating into a more comprehensive trade confrontation. Diplomatic engagement and targeted negotiations may help manage disagreements and reduce the risk of retaliatory escalation.

However, the underlying structural factors driving the current disputes are unlikely to disappear in the near term. Both the United States and the European Union appear committed to strengthening economic security and reducing strategic vulnerabilities, while China remains determined to defend its commercial interests and preserve access to international markets.

The proposed US tariffs and the European Union’s new industrial and cybersecurity measures represent important developments in the evolving relationship between China and major Western economies.

While these policies are justified by their proponents as necessary responses to labor, security, and competitiveness concerns, they have also heightened fears of Chinese retaliation and broader economic fragmentation.

The coming months will be critical in determining whether these measures remain contained policy disputes or become catalysts for a more extensive and potentially damaging global trade conflict.

US secretary of state, Kuwait foreign minister discuss regional security amid ‘reprehensible’ Iranian attacks

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US secretary of state, Kuwait foreign minister discuss regional security amid ‘reprehensible’ Iranian attacks

Secretary of State Marco Rubio talks to reporters ahead of briefing the Congressional “Gang of Eight” on U.S. strikes on Iran, at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, DC on March 2, 2026.  [Nathan Posner  - Anadolu Agency]

Secretary of State Marco Rubio talks to reporters ahead of briefing the Congressional “Gang of Eight” on U.S. strikes on Iran, at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, DC on March 2, 2026. [Nathan Posner – Anadolu Agency]

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio held closed-door talks Thursday with Kuwaiti Foreign Minister Jarrah Jaber Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah to discuss the strategic partnership between the two nations following recent military escalations, according to the State Department, Anadolu reports.

“The Secretary reiterated the commitment of the United States to Kuwait’s security, to ensuring that Iran never acquires a nuclear weapon, and restoration of freedom of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz,” said spokesperson Tommy Pigott.

Rubio condemned the “outrageous and unacceptable” Iranian strikes that recently hit the Kuwait International Airport and other parts of the country, expressing condolences for the casualties.

The meeting follows an announcement Wednesday by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) that it targeted a US base in Kuwait and the US Fifth Fleet headquarters in Bahrain. The attacks, reportedly in retaliation for a US strike on an Iranian communications tower, prompted Kuwait to declare two Iranian diplomats “persona non grata.”

READ: Iran claims US patriot missile, not Iranian strike, destroyed Kuwait airport terminal

Defense, strategic coordination

The Kuwaiti Foreign Ministry said the top diplomats reviewed “close historical ties” and affirmed a commitment to strengthening coordination in the political, defense and investment sectors.

“The meeting also included a condemnation of the repeated and reprehensible Iranian attacks against,” it said, adding both stressed the country’s “full right” to implement all necessary measures to safeguard its sovereignty and territorial integrity.

“The United States and Kuwait are united in our vision of regional stability and an open and free Strait of Hormuz,” Rubio noted on a US social media company X.

Microsoft testing wearable AI gadget aimed at office workers

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Microsoft testing wearable AI gadget aimed at office workers


Microsoft is developing new wearable technology with an artificial intelligence (AI) enabled gadget.

The company unveiled two concept products it has developed for people who often use AI tools in their work during its yearly conference for technology developers.

One device is a small portable cube with a touch and voice-activated screen, meant for a desk. The other was “a wearable access badge,” Microsoft executive Steven Bathiche said, to hang around the neck or on a belt loop, giving quick access to AI-driven work.

Microsoft, which did not say when it would bring either of the devices to market, said current pilots “will inform how these form factors can be built” in the future.

Satya Nadella, Microsoft chief executive, said such gadgets represented a “new form factor” for technology devices.

Currently, they are being used by a few hundred Microsoft employees.

Microsoft has previously attempted to break into the wearable devices.

The company developed a wearable headset, called the Hololens, akin to the Meta Quest or Apple’s Vision Pro headsets.

The Hololens was even set to be sold to the US Army in a contract worth billions of dollars.

But after almost a decade of development, and ongoing issues during testing by the military, Microsoft said in 2024 it would stop producing Hololens.

Google is also having a second go at wearables, as that company recently said it would try again with “smart glasses” more than a decade after its notorious Google Glass flop.

In a video demonstrating Microsoft’s AI-driven access badge and desktop device, part of what Nadella called Project Solara, people doing mainly office work were shown tapping the screens on both devices in order to see and connect to work being done by AI agents. Agents are essentially AI bots doing tasks somewhat autonomously.

Such agents are widely used by technology workers, assisting in their writing of software code, for instance.

The advancement of this kind of AI assistance has been cited widely by major tech executives in a recent wave of layoffs that have impacted many thousands of workers.

Microsoft’s badge and the desktop device would connect to various Microsoft software and PCs, letting a person interact with their AI agents outside of a laptop or desktop computer.

While the access badge is meant to be worn, Bathiche said it “is lightweight and designed for agent interactions on the go.”

Nadella was shown at one point in a recorded video wearing the access badge on a lanyard around his neck, similar to the way people wear identification cards required to enter office buildings.

The badge is also equipped with a small camera.

During Bathiche’s demonstration, he took the wearable badge, activated it using his fingerprint, and pointed it at the audience of the conference, telling it to take some pictures of the crowd and send them to him for review.

It did so, he said.

The camera allows agents “to better understand and help take action on the environment around them,” Bathiche said in an online blog post about the devices.

Cameras on other AI-centric devices, like Meta’s AI eyeglasses, for instance, have come under intense scrutiny about when, why and how they record and store video.

Via BBC

Dashlane explains how attackers managed to download encrypted password vaults

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Dashlane explains how attackers managed to download encrypted password vaults

Dashlane said that attackers mounted a coordinated hacking campaign against a large base of its users in an attempt to recover as many encrypted password vaults as possible. The password manager provider said fewer than 20 personal user vaults were downloaded before it shut down the operation.

In a campaign that started Sunday, the unknown threat actor abused the mechanism that allows Dashlane users to add new devices, such as computers or phones, to their accounts. By abusing Dashlane’s programming interfaces for device enrollment, the attackers sent requests to large numbers of existing users’ registered email addresses. In an update published Thursday, Dashlane wrote:

The threat actor targeted the API endpoints for device registration and used a brute force attack to send a large volume of automated requests to those endpoints.

In response, Dashlane’s automated security systems operated as intended, triggering an automatic lockout of the targeted accounts to protect those users. Before the attack was fully mitigated, the threat actor was able to brute force and generate valid tokens for fewer than 20 personal plan customers, allowing them to register a new device on those accounts and download copies of users’ encrypted vaults.

The flow and strategy of the attack

When a user installs the Dashlane app on a new device and attempts to enroll it in their existing account, Dashlane first verifies the account holder’s identity. This verification is completed by sending a one-time six-digit token to the user’s registered email address (or, for users who have enabled two-factor authentication, by validating a six-digit code generated by their authentication app).

For the registration to succeed, the user must enter this code into the Dashlane application. At this point, Dashlane will approve the enrollment and send a copy of the encrypted vault to the device. Vault contents remain unreadable until the user enters the master password, which acts as a decryption key. As Dashlane explains in its security documentation, the one-time password must be entered on the new, enrolling device for the registration to be successful.

Brute-forcing the one-time code for a single account—meaning iterating through every possible combination until the right one is entered—would be little more than a fool’s errand, even within the three-hour window that the codes remained valid. With 1 million possible valid codes, the attackers would have to cycle through a statistically significant percentage within that period. Rate limiting, in which a set number of requests are allowed per account, would also lock out the account.

To improve their odds, the attackers sent requests to register new devices across a large number of accounts. Then they simultaneously entered the one-time codes into each of them. In theory, attacking two accounts this way increased the odds for each try to 1 in 500,000. Attacking 1,000 accounts would increase the odds to 1 in 1,000, and so on. The more accounts that were targeted, the better the chances one of them will fall. The economics of password spraying work similarly. The technique also weakens rate limiting because the large number of attempts is spread out, limiting the number hitting any single account.

Ultimately, the 2FA spraying attack managed to hit the right combination on fewer than 20 user accounts, according to Dashlane, before it was shut down. The company said it has contacted all those users and that any user who has not already received a notification is unaffected.

For attackers to obtain the decrypted vault contents for those accounts, they would still have to crack the master password. Dashlane makes this process difficult by using an algorithm known as Argon2. It dramatically slows down and intensifies the process of converting the plain-text master password into a cryptographic hash. In turn, entering large numbers of guesses requires a tremendous amount of time and computing resources, even when the cracking is performed using GPUs or special-purpose hardware.

That means the chances of the attackers decrypting one of the encrypted vaults they obtained is very small in the event the master password was strong, meaning long, randomly generated, and has high entropy. However, not everyone uses such master passwords. In the event the master password was included in word lists exchanged by password crackers, the chances of success would be higher, although still unlikely.

Broadly speaking, the incident has similarities to the 2022 LastPass breach, which also allowed attackers to obtain encrypted user vaults. Eventually, the attackers managed to obtain decrypted information from some of them. The success was the result of two things.

First, certain fields, such as website URLs, remained unencrypted in vaults. That meant attackers could read them even without the master password. Second, some of the stolen vaults used outdated algorithms that didn’t adequately intensify the process for converting the plain-text password into a hash. Dashlane has said that no user fields in vaults are unencrypted. Further, when algorithms are periodically strengthened to account for advances in cracking abilities, the process occurs automatically, with no interaction required. The algorithm update process for LastPass vaults at the time came with more user friction.

Dashlane’s initial notification left out key details of the attack and led to considerable confusion about the ongoing risk users faced.

Out of an abundance of caution, both master passwords and the contents of any of the recovered Dashlane vaults should be changed immediately to reduce the chance, however unlikely, that the attackers succeed in breaking the master password. Unaffected Dashlane users don’t need to take any such action.

Trump Administration Tries to Shift Blame for Ebola Response

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Trump Administration Tries to Shift Blame for Ebola Response


As an Ebola outbreak continues to rage in Central Africa, the Trump administration keeps trying to blame the World Health Organization — revealing what experts say is a deep misunderstanding about global disease response.

In the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, local health workers have been battling the devastating virus without adequate supplies, testing materials, or international support. The outbreak is further complicated by the rare strain of the disease, known as Bundibugyo, that standard field tests often miss and for which there are no vaccines or therapeutics. At least 62 people in Congo and one in Uganda have died according to WHO, but experts say this is likely a significant undercount due to the outbreak emerging in a remote, war-torn region.

“The outbreak had a big head start, and we’re still behind, but under the leadership of the Government of DRC, we are catching up,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, told journalists on Wednesday, after a visit to the epicenter of the outbreak. African health officials say that it might take nine months or more to get a handle on the outbreak.

Experts say Trump administration policies — like dismantling the U.S. Agency for International Development and withdrawing from WHO — have undermined global health security and negatively impacted the response to the outbreak. The U.S. had been the largest provider of humanitarian assistance and health sector support to the Democratic Republic of Congo, funding more than 70 percent of humanitarian work there, according to a 2025 report from Physicians for Human Rights which noted the aid cuts have “severely harmed” public health and humanitarian efforts, including infectious disease control. The Trump administration has reportedly even barred some U.S. health officials from communicating with counterparts at WHO.

In the face of criticism of a U.S. failure to quickly respond to the Ebola outbreak, State Department spokesperson Tommy Pigott lashed out at WHO and heaped praise on his boss. “The security concerns in the area – which President Trump has taken unprecedented steps to address – and the WHO’s delay in informing the world of concerns until May 15 has had an impact,” he told The Intercept.

Public health experts say Piggot’s response exposes a fundamental confusion about how authorities combat infectious disease. “It reveals a lack of understanding about how international health regulations work and what a ‘public health emergency of international concern’ actually is,” Margaret Harris, a former senior WHO official and a medical doctor who responded to Ebola outbreaks in West Africa in the mid-2010s and Congo in the late 2010s, told The Intercept.

On May 5, WHO issued an alert of a high-mortality outbreak in Congo’s Ituri Province, which included deaths among healthcare workers. On May 14, blood samples were finally analyzed across the country, in the capital, Kinshasa. A day later, the analysis confirmed Bundibugyo virus disease, a strain of Ebola.

“We also need to remember that Ebola is only one health threat among many that these communities face.”

Dr. Mohamed Yakub Janabi, the WHO Regional Director for Africa, explained that affected nations are the lead actors. “WHO does not declare. It’s the member states who declare,” he told The Intercept on Thursday. “On the 15th, Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda declared. On the 16th, we declared the presence of Ebola, and on the 17th, Director-General Tedros declared this as a ‘public health emergency of international concern.’”

Dr. Marie Roseline Belizaire, WHO Africa’s Director of Emergency Preparedness and Response, further explained that under the well-defined protocols, states have the obligation to declare an outbreak after which the WHO informs the rest of the world and begins providing support. “There is a clear, well-defined methodology and it is clearly outlined in the international health regulations,” she told The Intercept.

The response is markedly quicker than in some previous outbreaks. During the 2014–16 Ebola crisis in West Africa — when more than 28,000 people were infected and more than 11,000 died in the largest ever outbreak of the disease — WHO became aware that Ebola was spreading in Guinea in March 2014 but did not declare a “Public Health Emergency of International Concern” until almost five months later.

Blame for any lag in response is not the fault of WHO, argued Harris, noting that USAID previously supported NGOs and healthcare workers in rural communities on the front lines of such outbreaks. “Dr. Tedros declared it without even calling the emergency committee together, so he wasted no time once they had information about the extent of the outbreak and the fact that clearly it had been running silently for a long time,” said Harris. “But the silence of the outbreak is not something you could lay at the feet of WHO. You lay that at the feet of a very fragile health system in the middle of a conflict that the rest of the world should be doing something to stop.”

The number of suspected Ebola cases in Congo has been reduced from over 1,000 last week to 116 as teams work through a backlog of tests. Experts say many suspected cases turned out to be malaria. This large number of people with untreated malaria demonstrates, they note, the chronic healthcare deficiencies in the region and a need for a comprehensive focus on public health there.

“We also need to remember that Ebola is only one health threat among many that these communities face,” said Tedros. “One of the things I heard from the community leaders is that they worry that the response to Ebola may take resources away from the health and humanitarian services they rely on for their many other needs.”

The Trump administration has faced scrutiny for pouring money into an Ebola quarantine and treatment center for infected Americans being built in Kenya, as a group of distinguished physicians, nurses, public health professionals, and humanitarian workers, including former top officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, called for Americans exposed to Ebola to be brought home for treatment. “We are deeply concerned by reports that the United States government is pursuing a policy under which American citizens with Ebola exposures requiring quarantine, isolation, or medical care would be transferred to a facility in Kenya,” they wrote in a letter to Congress, noting the “profound legal, ethical, and human rights concerns associated with preventing American citizens from returning home for care or diverting them to third-country facilities.”

On Wednesday, Secretary of State Marco Rubio doubled down on plans to bar Americans with Ebola from being treated in the U.S. “We cannot and will not allow any ‌cases of Ebola to enter the United States,” he said.

“It really sends the wrong message — that it’s a terrifying thing that you can’t possibly allow to arrive at your borders,” said Harris. Kenya has never experienced an Ebola outbreak, making it a perplexing choice of location for a treatment facility.

The U.S. could have set up a facility in Congo, Harris said, which has the most experience and expertise, having stopped 16 previous outbreaks. Or it could bring its citizens home for treatment and quarantine.

“If you’re going to not treat U.S. citizens on-site in DRC, bring them back to the U.S.” said Harris. “You’ve got one of the best health systems in the world, and you’ve got some of the brightest and best in the world in your country. So why aren’t you mobilizing them and showing that America is truly great?”

Israel’s Haredi Debate Becomes an Economic Reckoning

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Israel’s Haredi Debate Becomes an Economic Reckoning


Rising defense costs, demographic change, and gaps in education, employment, and military service are turning a long-running social dispute into a national fiscal challenge

Israel’s debate over the ultra-Orthodox community is no longer only about religion, draft exemptions, or coalition politics. At one of the country’s leading economic policy forums this week, it became a harder question: Can Israel afford its demographic future?

With defense spending rising toward 8% of gross domestic product and roughly a quarter of the state budget, and with Haredim projected to make up a growing share of draft-age Jewish Israelis, the question is no longer theoretical.

In Israel, military service is part of the social contract, defense spending consumes a growing share of national resources, and the army is not a distant institution but a common experience for most Jewish citizens. As those pressures grow, Haredi integration no longer appears only as a dispute over exemptions or religion, but as a budgetary, military, and economic issue.

The stakes are straightforward. As Haredim become a larger share of Israel’s population, the combination of draft exemptions, limited core education, lower male labor-force participation, and sectoral political leverage could strain the army, the tax base, and the high-skill economy on which Israel increasingly depends.

That question ran through the Eli Hurvitz Conference on Economy and Society, organized by the Israel Democracy Institute in Jerusalem. The conference covered defense spending, artificial intelligence, high-tech, the cost of living, reconstruction, healthcare, and the state budget. Yet the Haredi issue repeatedly returned, sometimes directly and sometimes through the broader language of human capital, labor participation, education, and public priorities.

The term Haredi refers to Israel’s ultra-Orthodox Jewish public, a rapidly growing community whose mainstream male institutions traditionally emphasize full-time Torah study. Many Haredi boys do not receive the same core curriculum in mathematics, English, and science as other Israelis; many Haredi men do not serve in the army, and many enter the workforce late or remain outside it for extended periods. Haredi women work at higher rates, often supporting large families, but household income remains relatively low.

Gilad Cohen Kovacs, a researcher at the Israel Democracy Institute who presented a session on “The Economy as a Driver of Change in Haredi Autonomy,” argued that the issue is also a question of how a separate institutional structure shapes growth, employment, and the welfare state.

Cohen Kovacs said the subsidies that support the current Haredi model amount to about 35 to 37 billion shekels a year, or roughly 5.5% of the state budget. Without change, he warned, that figure could grow to more than 60 billion shekels a year in the coming decades. The figures were presented as part of his conference analysis of Haredi autonomy and state support.

He stressed that the issue should not be understood as a simple transfer of “money to Haredim.” In his analysis, part of the money incentivizes patterns that keep Haredi men outside the workforce, while another part strengthens what he described as a parallel system of authority, education networks, communal institutions, and political control.

A welfare state, Cohen Kovacs said, is meant to help those who cannot work, protect people who have been harmed, and enable mobility. In the Haredi case, he argued, part of the subsidy supports the opposite pattern: lower use of earning capacity, partial employment, large families, and a yeshiva-centered way of life.

These are not the conditions for which the welfare state was built

“These are not the conditions for which the welfare state was built,” he said.

That distinction shifts the focus away from individual poverty and toward policy incentives that, according to Cohen Kovacs, sustain dependence and separation. His broader conclusion was that the current model produces a significant intersectoral transfer from non-Haredi Jewish households to Haredi households through tax gaps, public services, subsidies, and exemptions from shared obligations.

Former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett also cited studies on that net balance. According to Bennett, what he described as a “Zionist household”—a non-Haredi Jewish household integrated into military service and the labor market—gives the state about 6,000 shekels more per month than it consumes or receives, while a Haredi household receives about 4,000 shekels more per month than it pays. He described that as a gap of about 10,000 shekels per month between the two household types.

The comparison brought the fiscal debate down from national budgets to family income. It was not presented as a claim that one specific family directly funds another, but as an aggregate measure of taxes, state services, subsidies, benefits, and participation in public obligations.

Dr. Gilad Malach, a researcher at the Israel Democracy Institute who presented a separate study on the defense burden, told The Media Line that his work dealt with one specific part of the larger subsidy debate: security. He said Israel usually treats defense spending as a national budget item, without asking how that burden is distributed across different sectors of society.

Malach said it would be “too simplistic” to explain the gap just by noting that the Haredi public is poorer and therefore pays less tax. “You might say, ‘OK, this is a poor society, so they pay less than their share in the population,’” he said. “But we see that the gaps between them and others—it’s much more than that.”

According to Malach, the visible security budget stands at about 120 billion shekels a year, but the real cost is closer to 150 billion once hidden burdens are included: conscripts paid below their labor value, delayed entry into the workforce, and the cost to employers when reservists leave their jobs for extended service.

If the ultra-Orthodox are about 14% of Israel’s population, he said, they should account for roughly 21 billion shekels of that burden. In practice, he estimated, they contribute about 6 billion.

“So, the gap is 15 billion,” he said.

The figure is politically charged because it places the draft debate inside a broader fiscal equation: who pays for security, who serves, and who carries the indirect costs of a society built around long military service.

Malach was careful not to claim that the gap can be closed quickly. He said the policy tools he presented could reduce it, but not erase it. At most, he estimated, the immediate effect could be several billion shekels, not the full 15 billion.

“Just to make the situation less unequal, more equal than today, but not a real equality between the population,” he said.

The demographic warning was starker. Some forecasts, Malach said, place the Haredi population at around 30% of Israel’s total population within roughly four decades. The more important number, he added, is not the overall population share, but the share among draft-age Jews.

Among Jewish 18-year-olds, he said, the Haredi share could exceed half. In his view, that forecast, if it came true, would mean that “We won’t have manpower for an army if the situation would be that they are not serving in the army. And we can’t have a prosperous economy if so many people won’t have the ability to work in a modern labor market.”

Reem Aminoach, a senior researcher at the Institute for National Security Studies who previously served as financial adviser to the Israel Defense Forces chief of staff, told The Media Line that the problem is often made to look more complicated than it is.

“All you need is to cancel the deferral,” he asserted, referring to the legal mechanism that has allowed many Haredi men to avoid conscription as long as they remain in yeshiva study.

In his view, canceling the deferral would force a clearer choice: service, employment, or some other publicly accountable framework, rather than a system in which avoiding the army also discourages work. Aminoach said the army’s need is practical and immediate.

The army lacks fighters, not clerks

“The army lacks fighters, not clerks,” he said.

Shaul Meridor, a former senior Finance Ministry official, brought the debate down from national aggregates to the level of a single Israeli family. He described a middle- or lower-middle-class family in places such as Migdal HaEmek or Dimona, with five children, one of them serving in Lebanon, and unable to make ends meet. According to figures he cited from a recent study, such a family subsidizes a comparable low-income Haredi family by nearly 1,000 shekels a month.

“Many times we talk about high-tech and the rich and all kinds of other people who subsidize,” Meridor said. “I am talking about socioeconomic cluster four. Whoever knows what that means understands that this is not high-tech, and these are not people sitting in Tel Aviv or Ramat Hasharon. These are people who do not finish the month.”

He said the moral question after October 7 was no longer abstract.

“Why should a family that does not finish the month have to allocate, from money it does not have, 1,000 shekels net a month to subsidize a Haredi family that chose a different life?”

Meridor also argued that Israel’s current policies harm Haredi children themselves by steering them toward poverty.

“As leadership, we must not condemn Haredi children to poverty,” he said. “And that is what we are doing today.”

His proposed principle was direct: those who serve should receive, those who do not serve should not. Combat service, he said, should receive the most; other service should receive less; evasion should receive nothing. But he cautioned that dismantling Haredi autonomy would not happen through a single major law. It would require changes in thousands of government decisions, benefits, tax rules, and allocations that currently favor institutions over individuals.

Political speakers approached the same issue from different directions. Bennett focused on education and subsidies, using his speech to attack daycare payments for families in which the father does not work and does not serve. He also proposed a broad education reform built around a shared state curriculum, while preserving limited community autonomy.

Avigdor Liberman, chairman of Yisrael Beitenu and a former defense and finance minister, framed the issue through coalition politics. In a conversation with Yohanan Plesner, president of the Israel Democracy Institute, Liberman argued that Israel cannot sustain higher defense spending while preserving sectoral budgets and avoiding structural reform. He said any serious change would require a government not dependent on the Haredi parties Shas and United Torah Judaism.

Former Defense Minister Benny Gantz offered a more cautious critique. He said parts of the Haredi leadership were making a grave mistake by perpetuating a situation in which the community is more important than the state. At the same time, he emphasized that there are Haredim who work, study, serve, and contribute to the economy, and that they deserve respect.

Meirav Cohen, a Yesh Atid lawmaker and former minister for social equality, used Jerusalem as a warning. Speaking as a Jerusalemite, she said the capital already shows what happens when integration in the army, employment, and education does not move fast enough. Jerusalem, she said, has fallen in less than three decades from socioeconomic cluster five to cluster two. Every second household receives a municipal property tax discount, she said, meaning the other half must carry some of the highest municipal tax burdens in Israel.

There is no economic model for this

“There is no economic model for this,” Cohen said. “You don’t need prophecies or warnings. Look at what happened to us in Jerusalem.”

The Haredi debate came during a conference dominated by the rising cost of security and the shrinking space for civilian spending. Former Bank of Israel Governor Karnit Flug said in the opening budget session that Israel’s economy had shown resilience, but that the Israel-Hamas war had imposed a heavy price. Defense spending, she said, now stands near 8% of GDP, compared with a little more than 4% before October 7, 2023. Its share of the total budget has risen to about one-quarter, compared with 16% before the war.

That larger fiscal picture helps explain why Haredi integration is no longer treated only as a dispute over religious exemptions. Israel is trying to fund a larger defense establishment, increased rehabilitation needs, more support for reservists, reconstruction in the north and south, health-system gaps, transportation infrastructure, and a high-tech sector facing global competition. Speakers also warned that insufficient investment in Arab society carries its own cost in lost output, making the broader point that Israel cannot afford to underinvest in any large population group while defense and rehabilitation needs are rising.

Artificial intelligence and high-tech added another layer. The Israel Innovation Authority’s 2026 report, presented at the conference, showed that high-tech remains Israel’s main growth engine. In 2025, the sector contributed roughly half of the economy’s growth, reached 18.3% of GDP, accounted for 58% of exports, and employed more than 400,000 people. But the same report also warned of stagnation in employment share, a decline in research and development jobs in Israel, expansion of activity abroad, and growing pressure from the shekel’s appreciation.

That is why Haredi integration now intersects with the artificial intelligence debate. Israel wants to compete in a global economy built on advanced skills, data science, engineering, defense technology, and artificial intelligence. But a growing share of its future workforce is educated in systems that often do not provide the tools required for that economy. The point was not that every Israeli must work in high-tech, but that the next economy will demand basic quantitative and digital skills across far more jobs.

Eli Hurvitz, CEO of the Eddie and Jules Trump Family Foundation, told the conference that the children currently choosing what to study in high school will be the workforce of 2040. In an artificial intelligence-driven world, he said, mathematics, data, teamwork, and independent learning will become basic conditions for opportunity.

The challenge of Haredi integration does not fit neatly into familiar categories of minority rights or welfare policy. In Israel, it is tied to compulsory service, repeated wars, high defense costs, a knowledge-based economy, and a parliamentary system in which sectoral parties can hold the balance of power. The Haredi community is a growing part of Israel’s electorate, budget, labor market, and future security burden. That is why the debate has become one of the country’s central tests of governance.

The conference produced no single, comprehensive solution. Some speakers emphasized immediate enforcement of the existing draft framework. Others focused on incentives, core education, tax benefits, or direct ties between the state and Haredi individuals rather than through communal institutions. Some warned against coercion that could backfire, while others argued that decades of gradualism have failed. But there was a striking convergence around one point: the status quo is no longer to be treated as a manageable inconvenience.

The discussion, as reflected in the conference sessions and interviews cited here, was dominated by economists, former senior officials, and political figures warning about the long-term costs of the current model. Representatives of the major Haredi parties were not quoted in those sessions or interviews.

Malach put the warning in the starkest terms. Israel has survived enormous shocks, he said, and remains a wealthy country with a strong economy. But if current patterns continue as the Haredi population grows, the problem will not remain a matter of resentment or budgetary imbalance. It will become a question of manpower, productivity, and national resilience.

“Right now, it’s very hard, but we are handling,” he said. “The point is that if you call today’s situation very bad, things would be worse than that.”

What emerged in Jerusalem was more than an argument over the draft. It was a broader economic reckoning over who serves, who pays, who studies the skills needed for the next economy, and whether the state can continue financing separate rules for a growing part of its population. Israel’s next election may decide the coalition arithmetic. The harder question, raised throughout the conference, is whether any government will be willing to change the arithmetic of the country itself.

Ukraine war: air campaign intensifies as Russia and Ukraine trade massive drone and missile attacks

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ukraine-war:-air-campaign-intensifies-as-russia-and-ukraine-trade-massive-drone-and-missile-attacks
Ukraine war: air campaign intensifies as Russia and Ukraine trade massive drone and missile attacks

Over the past month, there has been a notable increase in the intensity of the air war in Russia’s aggression against Ukraine. Strikes in mid- and late-May and early June have been characterised by significantly larger numbers of drones and missiles deployed by Russia in single attacks, leading to more destruction and more casualties.

At the same time, Russian territorial gains on the ground have slowed significantly, and in some cases have been reversed by successful Ukrainian counter-attacks.

The change in intensity in the air war, however, is what generates headlines, and for good reason. Two consecutive Russian attacks on May 13 and 14 were the largest in the war to date.

Ten days later, a similar strike hit Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities. And a week after that, Russia launched yet another large-scale strike.

Just focusing on the Russian strikes, however, masks an important pattern of increasingly effective Ukrainian retaliation.

The first Russian attack in May was followed by Ukrainian strikes on the Moscow region. The second one saw Ukrainian strikes on St Petersburg on June 3, just before Vladimir Putin’s St Petersburg International Economic Forum was due to begin there.

At the same time, Ukraine has also intensified its strikes on Crimea and critical Russian supply lines to the peninsula, which Moscow has illegally occupied since 2014.

This series of Russian and Ukrainian airstrikes represents a high-intensity retaliation cycle. Ukraine responds to a Russian strike, which Moscow then uses to justify its massive strike, and so on.

What is new is both the scale of the Russian strikes, with larger numbers of drones and missiles compared even with the peak of attacks in late 2025, and the quickening cycle of these tit-for-tat attacks.

Ukrainian attacks deep into Russia are no longer just symbolic but highly effective – prompting Russia to accuse Ukraine of a terror campaign, in an attempt to deflect from its own systematic targeting of civilian infrastructure.

In their levels of destruction and civilian casualties, the Russian strikes also seem more effective than in the past – and Ukraine’s air defences less so. But this is only partially true. Ukraine’s intercept rate of drones remains high. However, the larger number of drones being deployed by Russia means that, in absolute numbers, more drones hit their targets.

Russia has also deployed more missiles in recent strikes, which Ukraine finds harder to intercept – not least because its stockpiles of anti-missile defences have been depleted over time, with the decrease in US support since Donald Trump’s return to the White House in January 2025.

The recent diversion of US interceptors to the American war effort in the Middle East has also run down the stocks of these defence systems that are available to Kyiv.

Can this intensity be sustained?

Russia has thus been presented with an opportunity it is ruthlessly exploiting. But how sustainable is the current pattern?

The scale and frequency of the past four weeks is probably beyond Russia’s capacity to sustain indefinitely. While still large in scale, the strikes in late May and early June did not involve the same number of munitions as the first wave.

Smoke rises over St Petersburg harbour, June 3 2026.

Embarrassment for Putin: Ukraine hit St Petersburg with drone strikes as the Russian president’s annual economic forum was about to start in the city. Ulf Mauder/dpa

Russia is clearly able to mass-produce cheap attack drones, but less able to do the same for missiles. So, sustaining larger-scale attacks over time is likely to decrease their frequency, while more frequent attacks will mean a more limited scale.

A mixture of the two is most likely – a sustained campaign of frequent massed drone strikes, with intermittent spikes of large missile barrages.

While this may be a sustainable attack pattern for Russia, it does not mean the current level of effectiveness is equally sustainable. Ukrainian air defences will adapt and become more effective, including against Russian missiles.

Its defence cooperation with the EU is simultaneously improving. The lifting of Hungary’s veto on €40 billion (£34.6bn) of EU reimbursements for military support is likely to free additional funds to supply critical air defence systems to Ukraine.

Even with a sustained Russian air campaign, a manageable equilibrium is likely to set in over time. But critically, this will not merely be characterised by better Ukrainian defences against Russian attacks – but also by more effective Ukrainian strikes at Moscow’s critical war infrastructure.

The Russian air campaign, and the war against Ukraine more generally, will thus become more costly for the Kremlin – and not just on the battlefield inside Ukraine.

Whether this simply creates a different stalemate at a more costly level for both sides in their ongoing war of attrition, or prompts them to reassess their exit strategies, remains to be seen.

For Moscow, there is a hard choice to be made: towards escalation, including potential nuclear mobilisation, or towards a peace deal. The middle ground of simply continuing is quickly eroding, because none of Putin’s strategic goals in the war can be achieved this way – and the ongoing waste of resources cannot be sustained indefinitely.

On the Ukrainian side, the statement by Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, that Ukraine’s recent strikes on Russia put the country on an equal footing with Moscow in negotiations, hints at Kyiv’s willingness to negotiate an end to the war with Moscow. However, it may take several more rounds in the air campaign retaliation cycle before the Kremlin reaches a similar conclusion.

War heats up as Russia, Ukraine trade drone and missile attacks

0
war-heats-up-as-russia,-ukraine-trade-drone-and-missile-attacks
War heats up as Russia, Ukraine trade drone and missile attacks

Over the past month, there has been a notable increase in the intensity of the air war in Russia’s aggression against Ukraine. Strikes in mid- and late-May and early June have been characterised by significantly larger numbers of drones and missiles deployed by Russia in single attacks, leading to more destruction and more casualties.

At the same time, Russian territorial gains on the ground have slowed significantly, and in some cases have been reversed by successful Ukrainian counter-attacks.

The change in intensity in the air war, however, is what generates headlines, and for good reason. Two consecutive Russian attacks on May 13 and 14 were the largest in the war to date.

Ten days later, a similar strike hit Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities. And a week after that, Russia launched yet another large-scale strike.

Just focusing on the Russian strikes, however, masks an important pattern of increasingly effective Ukrainian retaliation.

The first Russian attack in May was followed by Ukrainian strikes on the Moscow region. The second one saw Ukrainian strikes on St Petersburg on June 3, just before Vladimir Putin’s St Petersburg International Economic Forum was due to begin there.

At the same time, Ukraine has also intensified its strikes on Crimea and critical Russian supply lines to the peninsula, which Moscow has illegally occupied since 2014.

This series of Russian and Ukrainian airstrikes represents a high-intensity retaliation cycle. Ukraine responds to a Russian strike, which Moscow then uses to justify its massive strike, and so on.

What is new is both the scale of the Russian strikes, with larger numbers of drones and missiles compared even with the peak of attacks in late 2025, and the quickening cycle of these tit-for-tat attacks.

Ukrainian attacks deep into Russia are no longer just symbolic but highly effective – prompting Russia to accuse Ukraine of a terror campaign, in an attempt to deflect from its own systematic targeting of civilian infrastructure.

In their levels of destruction and civilian casualties, the Russian strikes also seem more effective than in the past – and Ukraine’s air defenses less so. But this is only partially true. Ukraine’s intercept rate of drones remains high. However, the larger number of drones being deployed by Russia means that, in absolute numbers, more drones hit their targets.

Russia in recent strikes has also deployed more missiles, which Ukraine finds harder to intercept – not least because its stockpiles of anti-missile defenses have been depleted over time, with the decrease in US support since Donald Trump’s return to the White House in January 2025.

The recent diversion of US interceptors to the American war effort in the Middle East has also run down the stocks of these defense systems that are available to Kyiv.

Can this intensity be sustained?

Russia has thus been presented with an opportunity that it is ruthlessly exploiting. But how sustainable is the current pattern?

The scale and frequency of the past four weeks is probably beyond Russia’s capacity to sustain indefinitely. While still large in scale, the strikes in late May and early June did not involve the same number of munitions as the first wave.

Russia is clearly able to mass-produce cheap attack drones, but less able to do the same with missiles. So, sustaining larger-scale attacks over time is likely to decrease their frequency, while more frequent attacks will mean a more limited scale.

A mixture of the two is most likely – a sustained campaign of frequent massed drone strikes, with intermittent spikes of large missile barrages.

While this may be a sustainable attack pattern for Russia, it does not mean the current level of effectiveness is equally sustainable. Ukrainian air defenses will adapt and become more effective, including against Russian missiles.

Its defense cooperation with the EU is simultaneously improving. The lifting of Hungary’s veto on €40 billion of EU reimbursements for military support is likely to free additional funds to supply critical air defense systems to Ukraine.

Even with a sustained Russian air campaign, a manageable equilibrium is likely to set in over time. But critically, this will be characterized not merely by better Ukrainian defences against Russian attacks – but also by more effective Ukrainian strikes at Moscow’s critical war infrastructure.

The Russian air campaign, and the war against Ukraine more generally, will thus become more costly for the Kremlin – and not just on the battlefield inside Ukraine.

It remains to be seen whether this simply creates a different stalemate at a more costly level for both sides in their ongoing war of attrition or prompts them to reassess their exit strategies.

For Moscow, there is a hard choice to be made: toward escalation, including potential nuclear mobilization, or toward a peace deal. The middle ground of simply continuing is quickly eroding, because none of Putin’s strategic goals in the war can be achieved this way – and the ongoing waste of resources cannot be sustained indefinitely.

On the Ukrainian side, a statement by Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky – that Ukraine’s recent strikes on Russia put the country on an equal footing with Moscow in negotiations – hints at Kyiv’s willingness to negotiate an end to the war with Moscow. However, it may take several more rounds in the air campaign retaliation cycle before the Kremlin reaches a similar conclusion.

Stefan Wolff is a professor of international security, University of Birmingham. Tetyana Malyarenko is a professor of international security and Jean Monnet Professor of European Security, National University Odesa Law Academy.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Beloved Comedian Involved in Serious Car Crash with 18-Wheeler

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beloved-comedian-involved-in-serious-car-crash-with-18-wheeler
Beloved Comedian Involved in Serious Car Crash with 18-Wheeler


Comedian and social media favorite Norman Freeman is thanking God after surviving a terrifying multi-vehicle crash that left his car mangled on the side of the road.

Freeman, who has built a massive online following with his comedy sketches, modeling work, and dramatic makeup transformations, revealed the frightening ordeal in a June 1 Instagram post. The entertainer shared several photos from the crash scene, showing a badly damaged vehicle near a roadway at night as emergency lights flashed in the background.

“I wasn’t gonna post this, but I’m extremely grateful!” Freeman wrote to his followers.

He then dropped the shocking details.

“I got hit by an SUV and an 18-wheeler a couple of days ago! Thank GOD I survived and I wasn’t at fault!” he said.

The crash appeared to involve three vehicles, and Freeman said the scene was so chaotic that he could not even safely get photos of the driver’s side of his car.

“I personally couldn’t get pics of the driver’s side, there was so much metal and car pieces on the road from all 3 cars that every time a car drove past, pieces flew,” Freeman explained.

He said he was too shaken up to stand on that side of the road, but added that the tow truck driver and police officers took photos of the wreckage.

“That’s all that matters,” he wrote.

In the comments, Freeman gave fans a more detailed explanation of how the crash allegedly unfolded.

According to the comedian, he was driving in front of an 18-wheeler in the slow lane when an SUV behind the truck tried to speed around it.

The SUV driver apparently did not realize Freeman was in front of the 18-wheeler.

“So here’s what happened,” Freeman wrote. “I was driving in front of an 18-wheeler (in the slow lane), and the SUV behind the 18-wheeler sped up and tried to go around the 18-wheeler (not knowing I was in front of it) and crashed into me, causing all 3 vehicles to crash.”

Freeman said his car was struck on the driver’s side, sending the vehicle into a rail.

“Painful is an understatement…” he added.

The comedian did not publicly detail any specific injuries from the crash, but his message made clear that the accident rattled him. Still, Freeman said he was quickly cleared of blame.

“Thank God there were cameras, and in less than an hour, the officer called and said I was NOT at fault,” he wrote. “Which I knew I wasn’t.”

Fans and celebrities flooded the comments with relief and prayers after Freeman shared the news.

“GOD IS!!!!” Hidden Figures star Taraji P. Henson wrote.

Another fan reminded him that material things can be replaced, but his life cannot.

“You can replace a car, but can’t replace a life!” the supporter wrote.

“Thank God you walked away with your life. Blessed,” another fan added.

Freeman has more than 1.5 million Instagram followers and is widely known for his funny sketches and impressive makeup looks. Despite the frightening crash, he appears to be moving forward and has already returned to posting online.

Just days after revealing the accident, Freeman teased a new comedy sketch for fans, showing that the terrifying wreck has not stopped him from getting back to what he does best.

These LLMs are the best at resisting Russian propaganda

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these-llms-are-the-best-at-resisting-russian-propaganda
These LLMs are the best at resisting Russian propaganda

As more people rely on large language models to provide pat answers to complex questions, state governments are understandably worried about those LLMs spouting what they see as dangerous propaganda promoted by foreign adversaries. To help combat this problem, the government-sponsored Estonian Language Institute (ELI) has released a new “Propaganda Resistance” benchmark ranking dozens of LLMs on their ability to avoid “tak[ing] positions on topics that the Russian Federation uses in its strategic narratives.”

As a former member of the Soviet Union that has been independent for just a few decades, many Estonians are particularly alert to what they see as false narratives being promoted from their large and often belligerent neighbor to the east. Alongside volunteer-run Estonian defense collective Propastop, the ELI identified 14 broad categories in which it sees Russian influence operations trying to sway public discussion. These range from narratives on the current status of Crimea and justifications for the war in Ukraine to the history of NATO and justification for Russia’s annexation of Baltic states during World War II.

For each category of propaganda, the researchers developed separate questions phrased to be neutral, biased with “false assumptions” based on Russian propaganda, or to maliciously attempt to elicit explicit misinformation from the LLM. Questions were provided to the models in English, Estonian, and Russian, and judged by a separate AI model (calibrated to align with Propastop experts) based on the models’ ability to “push back on propaganda narratives, without external help” from web search or other external tools.

The rankings

Anthropic’s Claude models tended to perform the best of the proprietary frontier models on this new benchmark, with various recent versions of its Sonnet and Opus models taking six of the top 10 spots. Opus 4.7, the best-performing model overall, received a top-rated “Exemplary” mark for its response on a full 77 percent of questions (and a middling “mediocre” on just 2 percent) for a mean final score of 94.9 out of 100 on the benchmark.

Open-weight models, including Nvidia’s Nemotron and Alibaba’s Qwen, showed strong results comparable to Anthropic’s best models. GPT-5.4—the best-performing model from OpenAI—also performed relatively well on the benchmark, providing “Exemplary” responses on 54 percent of questions and achieving an 88.9 mean score.

Unsurprisingly, recent frontier models showed a much stronger tendency to resist Russian propaganda than models from just a few years ago. Claude 3.5 Haiku—the highest-rated model released in 2024—received a mean rating of just 73.1 on the benchmark. That mark would put it in the bottom third of models released in 2026 on this metric.

Detailed benchmarks for Google’s Gemini 2.5 Pro model show particularly sensitivity to malicious prompts and prompts in Russian.

Detailed benchmarks for Google’s Gemini 2.5 Pro model show particularly sensitivity to malicious prompts and prompts in Russian. Credit: Estonian Language Institute

But that improvement over time was not uniform across all LLM makers. Google’s most propaganda-resistant LLM, Gemini 2.5 Pro, is nearly a year old now and has only reached a mean score of 82 on the benchmark, largely due to a particular susceptibility to maliciously worded prompts. The most recent tested Google model, Gemini 3.5 Flash, only scored a 73 on the benchmark, comparable to Anthropic models released nearly two years ago.

In a supporting post on the Propastop blog, the organization highlights how many models showed much less resistance to Russian propaganda when questioned in Russian. Google’s Gemini 3.5 Flash received significantly lower benchmark scores in Russian than in English, as did open-weight models like Moonshot’s Kimi K2 and StepFun’s Step 3.5 Flash.

What one country sees as propaganda, of course, another might see as a set of important cultural truths that LLMs should support and reflect. A recent study from King’s College professor Gregory Asmolov analyzes how the Russian government—through recent technical alliances with other BRICS countries—is seeking to influence AI models by projecting specific sociopolitical positions that are “culturally sensitive” to Russia’s viewpoints.

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