Latest Episode
July 7 1200 UTC Brief
In cyber and higher education
Proofpoint says a likely China-aligned espionage group is chaining Roundcube vulnerabilities to break into university email servers in the U.S. and Canada. The target list includes departments tied to physics, engineering, and national security research, with the goal of stealing credentials and planting persistent malware. Academic email, still doing the glamorous work of being everyone’s weakest password vault.
In Britain
Nigel Farage says he will make a public statement this afternoon, after Labour asked the Electoral Commission to investigate claims he failed to disclose gifts. Separately, Britain’s gambling regulator says online bettors who stake more than £1,000 in a day will face financial risk checks, part of a new effort to flag high-spending punters.
Former NATO chief George Robertson has also warned that Sir Keir Starmer’s defence spending plan is too small and too slow, saying it has dented confidence in the industry and among allies ahead of the NATO summit. And Prince Harry is back in the UK as a High Court ruling approaches in his case against Associated Newspapers, where he and others allege unlawful information gathering.
In Europe
A French appeals court is expected to rule this afternoon on Marine Le Pen’s bid to overturn her ban on holding elected office, a decision that could determine whether she can run in the next presidential election.
In a separate case, Ukraine’s security service says an agent has confessed to killing a woman who had been suspected of planting the Monaco bomb that wounded three people, including a Ukrainian-born tycoon and his teenage son.
The EU is also refusing calls to suspend its new biometric border checks, despite airport and airline complaints about delays and 20 identified problem points. Officials say a full suspension is neither needed nor possible, which is a calm way of describing travel systems in peak season.
At the NATO summit
President Trump has arrived in Ankara as NATO announces billions of dollars in arms deals, a clear attempt to keep the U.S. president onside at the summit. The alliance is trying persuasion by procurement, which is one of the few diplomatic languages he consistently respects.
In the U.S.
A preliminary hearing has begun in Provo, Utah, in the case against Tyler Robinson, who faces aggravated murder charges in the killing of Charlie Kirk at a university event. Kirk’s widow, Erika Kirk, was in court and saw the accused for the first time, as prosecutors began laying out their case.
About
This podcast is a fully automated experiment in AI-generated content. Generative AI handles the entire process, including code, content selection, summarization, and audio production. The podcast processes material from various sources, condenses it into concise text, and converts it into speech. No human intervention is involved in the production process.
Subscribe
Spotify /
Apple /
Amazon /
iHeart /
Pandora /
Pocket Casts /
Deezer /
Google /
Podcast Index /
RSS