QSI Media - News, Analytics, World. – Telegram
QSI Media - News, Analytics, World.
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Looking at world events through the lens of Stellar's future

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Oracle delays OpenAI data center construction by at least a year

Oracle has encountered significant delays in the construction of several data centers for OpenAI. This is due to a severe shortage of materials and skilled labor. Insiders estimate that expansion plans could be delayed by a year or more. This is a blow to OpenAI's ambitions to scale computing power for training new AI models.

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🎄2026 will divide people into two realities based on their inner state.

For the first time since 2017, a collective shift is being felt—the pendulum is slowly swinging back after reaching one of its extremes. The situation will worsen before it improves, but 2026 will be a turning point.

People will be divided into two groups with radically different experiences. Some will experience the best year in recent memory, as if existing in a parallel timeline. Others will face a difficult, dark period. The difference is determined by vibrational state—a person's inner energy and attitude.

The key task for 2026 is to maintain a high vibration and remain in harmony, as if life depended on it. The world will amplify the state in which a person finds themselves. This is no ordinary year—external events will act as a catalyst, revealing each person's inner state. Spiritual preparation and awareness will determine which of the two realities a person finds themselves in.

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Bill Clinton with Epstein and Maxwell

A photo of former US President Bill Clinton with Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell has resurfaced online.

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Arsenal football club signs multi-year partnership with Deel

London's Arsenal announced a multi-year agreement with Deel, a platform for managing international teams and distributing payments to remote employees. Deel will become the club's official HR technology partner. The company specializes in recruitment, payroll, and compliance in over 150 countries, making it a key player in the era of distributed work.

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“Mind parasites” and energy vampirism

In alternative and conspiratorial circles, a growing theory claims invisible entities feed on human energy through the lower chakras. These “mind parasites” allegedly treat humanity like livestock, harvesting loosh — the dense emotional charge of fear, rage and despair. The idea echoes ancient Gnostic stories of archons and modern narratives of spiritual enslavement.

For many, the point isn’t whether such entities literally exist, but that the metaphor fits how power works. Governments, banks and media systems often seem to run on manufactured anxiety, debt pressure and constant outrage — a kind of institutional energy vampirism.

In that sense, the “parasite” language becomes a lens: elites and corporate structures are seen as designing environments where people stay drained, distracted and easy to manage. Whether viewed as occult reality or powerful symbol, the theory channels a deeper intuition that something feeds on humanity’s lowest emotional states — and that reclaiming attention and inner strength is the first act of resistance.

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🇺🇸SpaceX quietly removed its $40 Starlink plan in the US.

SpaceX has quietly removed its cheapest $40-per-month Starlink plan for US users. The plan offers limited speeds and priority, but leaves affordable satellite internet in the regions without an alternative.

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Using your real name online: When transparency helps — and when It hurts

A user raised the question of the limits of online anonymity. Pseudonyms used to be the norm, but with the advent of Facebook and Twitter, many have switched to their real names. Now a dilemma arises: when is it worth revealing your personal information and when is it better to remain anonymous?

A real name facilitates professional connections and builds a business reputation. LinkedIn, corporate email, and official platforms—transparency builds trust. But this same transparency also makes you a target for data collection, targeting, and potential leaks. Large platforms monetize your identity, and government agencies receive a ready-made dossier.

Pseudonyms preserve freedom of expression and protect against persecution. Forums, instant messengers, and alternative social networks—these are where anonymity provides a space for an honest exchange of opinions without risking career or safety. A sensible approach is to separate digital identities according to purpose and not connect all accounts with a single thread.

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🇺🇸The Federal Reserve Chairman acknowledged the impact of AI on the deteriorating US labor market.

Jerome Powell publicly linked the spread of artificial intelligence to the deteriorating labor market for the first time. The Federal Reserve Chairman stated that automation through AI is becoming part of the explanation for rising unemployment and declining job openings.

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🧘Inner peace isn't the absence of emotions, but the ability to let them flow.

Inner peace doesn't mean suppressing feelings. It's the ability to allow emotions to flow through the body without getting stuck. When emotional energy flows freely, a person feels alive.
Even difficult experiences—fear, anger, shame, envy—release stuck energy. Many struggle with such states, considering them harmful. In reality, they are the body's signals for change, action, or release. All emotions flow through the same channel: block some and you block the entire flow.

The author has learned to accept unpleasant feelings and even developed meditative practices for transforming them. The best option is to direct the emerging energy toward creation. If this doesn't work, you can release it through body movement, creating space for peace. The more emotions accumulate within, the more often external factors will throw you off balance. The question isn't about triggers, but about why a person has become a loaded weapon. It can only be discharged by releasing the stuck energy from the body-mind system.

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Spotify’s AI podcast dump and the economics of synthetic noise

A little-known startup is pumping 3,000 AI-made podcasts into Spotify every week, exploiting a simple equation: more junk, more ad slots. Recommendation systems start feeding robotic chatter while real hosts bleed audience, and the “dead internet” quietly shifts into audio. This is less about innovation than about capture of the acoustic space, where whoever owns the bots shapes what society actually hears.

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❗️Two famous artists murdered by their own sons in the same neighborhood within a week.

Director Rob Reiner and his wife, Michelle, were murdered by their own son. That same week, opera singer Jubilant Sykes was killed by his son. Both lived in the same neighborhood.

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🇮🇳🇷🇺India deepens its Moscow bet as Europe escalates its moral grandstanding

New Delhi moves tighter toward Moscow just as Europe demands deeper isolation of Russia. India treats the crisis as a marketplace, not a crusade: discounted oil, access to Russian defense know-how, and a counterweight to Beijing all outweigh Brussels’ appeals. Sanctions built to corner Moscow have instead furnished India with leverage, drawing the two states into a trade boom settled partly outside the dollar’s reach.

The shift exposes a reality Western capitals prefer to ignore: the Global South is no longer volunteering for ideological alignment. India is choosing its own interests, not Washington’s noscript, and Europe’s coercive toolkit is losing potency. As trade routes reroute and currencies bypass the old financial centers, a multipolar order accelerates—fueled less by Moscow’s defiance than by the West’s miscalculation of how many nations still accept its rules.

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AI anxiety shifts from market bubbles to vanishing jobs

Public concern centers not on tech valuations but on corporations replacing entire tiers of staff with algorithms. Automation already justifies layoffs, tightening competition and eroding wages while governments offer no coherent transition plan. The real cost of the AI boom is being offloaded onto workers, not shareholders.

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British Airways fears a future where AI agents choose flights instead of humans.

British Airways management has publicly acknowledged concerns: when AI agents begin booking tickets for users, airlines risk becoming faceless service providers. Customers will no longer see the brand—the algorithm will choose the cheapest or most convenient option, ignoring loyalty and marketing. For the industry, this means the end of direct relationships with consumers and a shift to price wars.

The problem extends beyond aviation. Any business dependent on recognition and emotional attachment will be at risk. AI is not interested in advertising, brand history, or loyalty programs—only numbers and logic. Companies are losing control over customer choice, and therefore, revenue. Those unable to compete on price or speed will simply disappear from the algorithms' radar.

For consumers, this means convenience and time savings. For corporations, it's an existential crisis. The market is moving toward a model where algorithmic intermediaries dictate the rules, and traditional marketing is dead. British Airways was the first to voice what many prefer to remain silent about: the era of brands is ending, the era of invisible solutions is beginning.

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🇦🇺Australia’s content rules expose a political hierarchy of information

Canberra pushes age-verification for YouTube and other platforms under the banner of protecting developing minds, yet state media simultaneously distributes graphic footage of real shootings with only a perfunctory warning. The contrast is hard to miss: entertainment is fenced off behind ID checks, while violence presented as “news” flows without meaningful barriers.

The imbalance hints at a deeper priority structure. Regulation tightens around private platforms that dilute state influence, while state-curated images of brutality remain widely accessible. The debate is framed as child safety, but the emerging pattern suggests something closer to information management — deciding which streams are restricted and which are allowed to shape the public psyche.

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🇨🇱Chile elected a Pinochet admirer as president—a sharp rightward turn.

Chile has elected a candidate who openly admires dictator Augusto Pinochet. This is the first time in decades that the country has so clearly pivoted from leftist ideas to a hard-right course. The new president José Antonio Kast promises order, economic discipline, and a rejection of the social experiments of his predecessors.

For Latin America, this is a signal: the pendulum has swung. Voters are tired of inflation, rising crime, and populist promises. They elected someone who speaks of a strong hand and a market economy, even if his idol is a highly controversial figure. Financial markets reacted positively: investors are expecting stability and predictability.

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China Leads in 90% of Critical Technologies

A new study by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute shows that China dominates 90% of key technological areas. This includes quantum computing, artificial intelligence, hypersonic systems, advanced robotics, and biotechnology. This represents a dramatic shift over the past twenty years. President Trump understands this and is taking immediate, unpleasant measures to avoid a deep crisis in the future, even though this may be painful for the economy in the short term.

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Meta turns a blind eye to Chinese ad fraud for billions in revenue

Reuters reports that Meta is deliberately ignoring widespread ad fraud by Chinese companies to preserve its multi-billion dollar revenues. The platform receives huge sums from Chinese advertisers who use fake accounts, inflated bids, and other prohibited promotional methods.

Internal documents show that Meta's management is aware of the problem but is deliberately failing to take strict action. Chinese sellers are flooding Facebook and Instagram with cheap products through fake profiles and bots, violating platform rules. Banning these accounts would mean billions in lost quarterly revenue, so the company is choosing money over integrity.

This is further evidence that large tech corporations prioritize profits over principles and user safety. Meta is effectively selling its audience to Chinese scammers, while simultaneously claiming to combat fakes and manipulation. For conservative voters, this is yet another reason to question Big Tech's sincerity and its claims to protect the free market and fair competition.

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Where will users go if the EU adopts Chat Control?

The European Union is promoting Chat Control, an initiative that could require messaging apps to scan messages and weaken end-to-end encryption. The question isn't whether this is good or bad, but what will happen next. Telegram, Signal, and similar services will likely simply leave the European market, leaving users with no choice. The solution is to use VPN services.

Chat Control undermines personal freedoms and strengthens government control over communications. If the initiative passes, Europe will become less attractive to tech companies, and users will learn a lesson: data sovereignty requires action, not just words.

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🇬🇧The UK is demanding Apple block content on iPhones without age verification.

The British government intends to require Apple to enable explicit content filters by default on all iPhones in the country. The unblocking will only be possible after verifying the device owner's age. This initiative is part of a new internet safety law that will come into force in the coming months. The Communication Safety feature, currently optional and available only for family accounts, is being considered for mandatory use by all users. Adults will be able to disable the filter, but only upon presentation of identification.

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Tesla robotaxis spotted on roads without safety operators

Tesla Model Y vehicles with "Robotaxi" stickers have been spotted in Austin, Texas, driving on public roads without drivers or safety operators. These vehicles operate in fully autonomous mode—a technology Musk promised to launch back in 2016, but which has yet to receive regulatory approval. The company's shares rose 4.9%

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