Technology, Politics, Mind. Since 2014.
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Deeply reported business storytelling — the frauds, empires, collapses, and secrets behind the world's biggest companies. Every film is built on court records, regulator filings, and original investigative reporting.

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Europe

London

The UK just became the second country to ban under-16s from social media, and the part nobody is debating is whether the age-verification tech actually works

  1. Fujitsu engineers could remotely alter subpostmaster accounts without their knowledge — and the Post Office told courts for years that they couldn't
  2. Booking.com runs well over a thousand simultaneous A/B tests at any moment from its Amsterdam headquarters, on an experimentation platform engineers built in the mid-2000s and have patched continuously without ever fully replacing, and a single button colour test passed into company folklore as the change that reportedly earned more than its first three years of trading combined

North America

New York

A single bolt of lightning that crossed Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi in April 2020 stretched 768 kilometres end to end, once the longest single flash ever recorded and roughly the distance from New York City to Columbus

  1. Cambodia stripped Chen Zhi of citizenship in January 2026 and handed the 'Neak Oknha' royal advisor to Beijing — not Brooklyn
  2. The US Justice Department seized 127,271 bitcoin worth $15B — the largest forfeiture in American history traces back to a 2020 mining hack nobody reported

Asia

Singapore

Adyen processes payments for Uber, Spotify, eBay, and Microsoft from an Amsterdam canal house where the engineering team still eats lunch at a single long table, and the company went public worth €7 billion with fewer staff than a midsize hotel

  1. In 1991, researchers at Cambridge's Computer Lab pointed a grey-scale camera at the department coffee pot and streamed the image to their desktops, because they were tired of walking three floors only to find the jug empty — and accidentally invented the webcam
  2. Norway's sovereign wealth fund owns roughly 1.5% of every listed company on Earth, and the team deciding how it votes at 9,000 annual shareholder meetings is smaller than the compliance department of a single mid-sized European bank

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Technology

Canal Letter

Bezos, Altman and Milner have poured billions into cell reprogramming as the new anti-aging frontier — and Life Biosciences just dosed the first human, but the field’s older bets left few clinical wins and brutal trial misses

Cell reprogramming — the technique of returning adult cells to a more youthful state using four genetic factors identified in Nobel Prize-winning research — has become the buzziest approach in longevity science, displacing earlier obsessions with telomere lengthening and senolytic drugs.

  1. Xcimer just turned on the largest privately owned laser in the world — and the real story isn't the kilojoules, it's who gets to own the supply curve for fusion energy
  2. Oxford Quantum Circuits just raised Europe's largest-ever quantum round at £260M — and the customer list reveals who is really underwriting the entire sector
  3. Nobody talks about why supply-chain attackers started hiding command servers inside Google Calendar events and Solana memo fields — and the Glassworm takedown finally explains it
All in Canal Letter →

Politics

Cabinet

The UK's Online Safety Act gives Ofcom the power to fine platforms 10% of their global revenue, which for Meta alone would be over $16 billion, and the enforcement unit responsible for issuing those fines has fewer than 50 staff

The UK's Online Safety Act gives Ofcom theoretical penalty powers larger than the GDP of small countries. The team that actually issues those fines has fewer than 50 staff — and Meta is now in the High Court trying to shrink the formula.

  1. A one-person startup just raised $30M at a $250M valuation, and it explains ClickUp's 22% layoff
All in Cabinet →

Mind

Field Notes

5 concepts that completely changed how I think about focus and productivity

I had a morning recently that, on paper, should have been a good one.

  1. We treat the eight-hour day as an acceptable day's work, but many celebrated figures did their best thinking in just four or five hours a day — and that deliberate rest may have been key
  2. After combing nearly 12,000 daily diary entries from 238 workers, researchers found that the strongest force behind motivation and creativity wasn't the lever managers reach for — pay or praise — but something quieter: progress on work that mattered
  3. Using more than 35 years of US survey data, some researchers found Americans were happier in years of lower income inequality — and the link seemed to run not through money, but through how fair and trustworthy others felt
All in Field Notes →

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Undercurrent

Where three streams meet. Each Sunday, one synthesis of the week’s technology, politics, and mind coverage — plus the wider innovation reading we found worth your time.

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