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Securing Tomorrow: Your Daily Dose of Cyber Safety, Tech Trends, National Security News, and Inspiration.

“The die is cast”

 

-Julius Caesar

I. National Security: Key developments in national security, particularly cyber and technological warfare.

  • U.S. Military Buildup In The Middle East Grinds On (Updated)

  • President Donald Trump insists the United States has not ruled out a kinetic strike against Iran after the regime’s brutal crackdown on protesters, while the Pentagon accelerates a Middle‑East buildup that includes the USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group steaming westward, F‑15E fighters and C‑17 cargo planes flying from RAF Lakenheath, and additional Patriot and THAAD air‑defense systems heading to the region; at the same time, Iran endures a nationwide internet blackout, its armed forces issue direct threats against Trump, and Israel warns it can absorb a massive Iranian missile barrage if a U.S.‑backed regime change materializes, leaving the area on edge as diplomatic and military options swirl. click here to read more.

II. Tech Trends: Updates on emerging technology trends shaping the digital world.

  • Has Gemini surpassed ChatGPT? We put the AI models to the test.

  • Ars Technica pits OpenAI’s ChatGPT 5.2 against Google’s Gemini 3.2 Fast across a suite of prompts—dad jokes, a math word problem, a Lincoln‑basketball story, a short biography, a delicate email, medical advice, Super Mario troubleshooting, and a 737 landing guide—then scores each response for accuracy, clarity, creativity and usefulness. Gemini secures four wins, a tie, and only one loss, outshining ChatGPT on factual detail, unit consistency and source citation while avoiding the hallucinations that marred ChatGPT’s biography and math calculations; ChatGPT, however, edges Gemini on humor and narrative flair. The results illustrate how Google has narrowed the gap with OpenAI, a factor that likely swayed Apple’s decision to power Siri with Gemini. click here to read more.

     

III. Inspiration: Articles centered on faith that offer guidance and reflection.

  • Minnesota Church Vows to Keep Preaching Gospel Despite Protesters’ Disruption

  • Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota, denounced a group of anti‑ICE demonstrators who stormed its Sunday service, marched to the pulpit and shouted slogans, frightening families and children; pastor Jonathan Parnell issued a statement affirming the congregation’s commitment to continue preaching the gospel, calling the intrusion unlawful, an attack on religious liberty, and urging local, state and federal officials to protect the right to worship without interference while the church consults legal counsel; Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and the U.S. Department of Justice both condemned the disruption and announced an investigation. click here to read more.
     

IV. Cyber Safety: A focus on the latest cybersecurity threats, tips, or breaches impacting individuals and organizations.

  • Europe plans to phase out high-risk suppliers and China’s Huawei isn’t happy

  • The European Commission proposes revising the EU Cybersecurity Act to phase out components and equipment from “high‑risk” suppliers in 18 critical sectors—including telecom, automotive, energy, water, drones, cloud services, medical devices and semiconductors—within a three‑year window for mobile operators, with later timelines for fixed networks; the draft, aimed at bolstering tech sovereignty and cyber‑attack resilience, draws criticism from China’s Huawei, which argues the measures violate fairness, non‑discrimination, WTO rules and constitute protectionism, while the EU stresses that any restrictions will follow formal risk assessments and market analyses. click here to read more.

V. Shield of Israel: Coverage from The Jerusalem Post, providing an Israeli perspective on ongoing conflicts.

  • WSJ publishes Iran FM’s most direct threat to Trump that dismisses violent protest crackdown

  • Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi published a stark op‑ed in the Wall Street Journal, warning that Iran will fire back with “everything we have” if the United States attacks, and insisting the warning reflects reality, not a threat. He blames Israel and U.S. proxies for any escalation, claims the two nations were close to a “middle‑way” deal in Oman that collapsed, and accuses Washington of pursuing sanctions, cyber assaults, and potential military action. Araghchi also portrays the recent Iranian protests as hijacked by foreign‑backed terrorists, denying reports of a massive civilian crackdown that human‑rights groups estimate has killed thousands and led to tens of thousands of arrests. While he asserts Iran prefers peace and remains ready for genuine negotiations, the piece sparked controversy and led to his exclusion from the Davos summit. click here to read more.

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