Robots march across UT Austin campus in display of power and ingenuity

The Texas Robotics team at UT Austin recently showcased their cutting-edge robots in a vibrant parade. The event highlighted the impressive capabilities of these robots, which can dance, engage in conversation, and even provide medical assistance.

Attendees were amazed as the robots demonstrated fluid dance moves, showcasing the team’s advanced programming and engineering skills. Beyond entertainment, the robots’ ability to chat interactively opened new possibilities for human-robot communication.

Most notably, some robots exhibited medical assistance functions, emphasizing the practical applications of robotics in healthcare. The Texas Robotics team’s display not only entertained but also highlighted the future potential of robotics technology.
https://www.kxan.com/technology/robots-march-across-ut-austin-campus-in-display-of-power-and-ingenuity/

“I didn’t leave the team, bro”: Ex-LSU DT Sydir Mitchell claims Brian Kelly forced him out in shocking confession on TikTok

The LSU Tigers fired Brian Kelly from his coaching role last week. However, surprising stories have surfaced from the program following Kelly’s exit.

On Thursday, former LSU defensive tackle Sydir Mitchell revealed that his decision to leave the team was not his own; rather, he was forced out by Kelly.

“People come to disagreements, but it wasn’t no hard feelings. It was his decision,” Mitchell said. “It wasn’t nobody else’s decision. It was BK’s. He felt like the decision wasn’t fair for the team, even though it had nothing to do with the team. That’s how he felt.”

Mitchell also shared his plans to enter the transfer portal as he considers continuing his football career elsewhere. “I’m finna get in that portal,” he noted. “I just got to finish up school. I’m just staying low key, finishing school, bro.”

Mitchell transferred to LSU ahead of the 2025 season after beginning his collegiate career with the Texas Longhorns in 2023. During his time at Texas, he played in nine games, recording seven tackles and 0.5 tackles for loss across two seasons.

Though Mitchell did not play a snap for the Tigers this season, after two games, Kelly confirmed that the defensive lineman was no longer with LSU, citing failure to meet “workplace standards.”

**LSU Could Avoid Paying Brian Kelly His Full $54 Million Buyout**

According to reports, LSU owes Brian Kelly $54 million as part of his buyout. However, the school has filed legal paperwork alleging Kelly was removed “for cause,” which it claims would allow LSU to avoid paying out the second-largest buyout in college sports history.

Kelly compiled a 34-14 record in under four years at LSU and helped the Tigers win the SEC West division title in 2022.

**Also Read:** Tony Pauline’s NFL Mock Draft 1.0: Arch Manning to NFC North contenders, Garrett Nussmeier swooped by AFC North team, Drew Allar heads to NFC West.
https://www.sportskeeda.com/college-football/news-i-didn-t-leave-team-bro-ex-lsu-dt-sydir-mitchell-claims-brian-kelly-forced-shocking-confession-tiktok

In hurricane-torn Jamaica, this couple’s climate-resilient breadfruit program offers food and hope

After Hurricane Melissa’s exceptionally strong winds subsided, the roots of breadfruit trees clung deep into the fertile Jamaican soil, offering hope and a step toward future food security.

For the past 16 years, Mary and Mike McLaughlin—Jamaican natives who now reside in Winnetka—have helped plant almost half a million fruit trees across the Caribbean and Africa, with about 250,000 of those in Jamaica alone. Most of these are breadfruit trees, a crop known for its resilience but long underutilized as a food source, according to Mary McLaughlin.

The couple’s Trees That Feed Foundation aims to expand breadfruit cultivation in areas vulnerable to extreme weather events that are intensifying due to human-induced climate change. Several scientific analyses found that Hurricane Melissa was made more likely and intense by global warming from fossil fuels.

“It’s one of the worst hurricanes—well, it’s the worst hurricane ever—in the Caribbean country,” Mary McLaughlin told the Tribune, “and it hit Jamaica in its breadbasket,” referring to the southwestern parish of St. Elizabeth. This region, known for its fertile soil, is essential for crops that feed the country. Having planted trees in the area, the foundation anticipates some losses.

“However, we have worked in countries that have had hurricanes and seen recovery, and if the trees have roots in the ground, those trees will recover. And we know we may miss a bearing season, but the following year, they will produce,” Mary McLaughlin explained. She also noted that these trees “lock carbon away while feeding people,” thus addressing the root causes of increasingly destructive weather events.

Jamaicans are now coping with the aftermath of a hurricane so severe that it ties with a 1935 storm as the third strongest ever recorded in the Atlantic Ocean, and the most intense to make landfall in the country. Rita Hilton, who has lived in Jamaica for 60 years and works with the McLaughlins to help farmers export their crops, called Hurricane Melissa “the most intense, horrific storm” she has experienced.

Hilton was airlifted to Kingston, the country’s capital, this week after seven days spent in her isolated, damaged home. “If you look at all the forest trees, there’s not a green leaf; there are tree stumps sticking out of the ground or lying across the road,” she told the Tribune. “Whatever crops were in the ground have been destroyed in that area.” However, not all is lost—especially where those stumps belong to breadfruit trees.

“In times of disaster such as this, when a lot of agricultural produce is damaged, we need things that can actually survive,” she said. Local papers have written about people eating breadfruit after the storm, as food supply routes have suffered with roads impassable. “The breadfruit trees that did come down,” Hilton added, “have been a godsend for some communities.”

As Jamaica recovers, replanting more trees will be crucial to ensuring food security. In the next few months, a new grant from the foundation will fund the planting of at least 15,000 trees in Jamaica, the McLaughlins said.

Years of partnership between the foundation and Jamaica’s Forestry Department began when the latter started replanting native forests, mostly timber trees such as blue mahoe and mahogany, which are better adapted to withstand strong winds. “The plan is to use more and more natives in our reforestation programs and to transition some of the existing areas that have a high percentage of nonnative species,” said Henry, the head of the Forestry Department. “This will increase the resilience of these spaces, particularly in light of the obvious and current problem of hurricanes in Jamaica.”

The couple also approached the local government about distributing fruit trees, which offer the additional benefit of providing a reliable harvest year after year, without the need to replant. After moving to the United States for Mike McLaughlin’s job as an actuary in 1978, the McLaughlins settled in the Chicago area a decade later. Their connection to Jamaica remained strong—especially in the early 2000s, when they felt compelled to act on the climate crisis and its consequences for island nations like their homeland. From this sense of urgency, Trees That Feed Foundation was born.

In Jamaica, the partnership works by having the foundation provide grants to the Forestry Department, which in turn buys cuttings from local plant nurseries and distributes them to small farmers at no cost. “We do get our hands dirty, but us two little people can’t plant half a million trees,” Mike McLaughlin said. “We work with farmers. They really know what they’re doing.”

“So we don’t go in and impose,” Mary McLaughlin added. The farmers want a sense of ownership over the trees, she noted, which also supports small businesses that can grow from selling the fruit.

The program supports both food security and income generation, said Henry of the Forestry Department. “You heard of win-win? Well, this is win-win-win-win,” Mike McLaughlin said. “The win is nutrition. The win is the environment. And the win is the economy. And our donors are generous people, and I would say they are winning too. They want to help, and we give them a way to help that is very efficient.”
https://www.bostonherald.com/2025/11/14/hurricane-melissa-jamaica-breadfruit-climate-change/

Atrocities in Sudan Require World’s Attention, U.N. Says

The United Nations’ top human rights body has ordered an inquiry into mass killings and sexual violence occurring amid the country’s worsening civil war.

This decision underscores growing international concern over the escalating violence and humanitarian crisis. The investigation aims to document abuses and hold perpetrators accountable.

As the conflict continues to intensify, the inquiry seeks to bring much-needed attention to the plight of affected communities and support efforts toward justice and reconciliation.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/14/world/africa/sudan-atrocities-civilians-un.html

Euronext Transforms Over a Decade

In his first interview as manager of Liverpool football club, Jürgen Klopp said his aim was to change doubters into believers. Stéphane Boujnah has been on a similar journey since becoming chief executive officer and chairman of the managing board of Euronext, the European financial market infrastructure, in November 2015.

Boujnah told Markets Media: “The recipe for success is cost management, operational discipline, the willingness to have unpleasant conversations and to accept being lonely as a CEO. To be successful, you can’t afford to be the one that pleases everyone.”

Over the past ten years, Euronext has diversified its top line away from equities, expanded into post-trade services to cover the full capital markets value chain, added new asset classes, and entered new geographies through a series of strategic acquisitions.

The group has grown from a cash equities-focused operator of four national exchanges to covering seven local markets, one clearing house, four central securities depositories, a fixed income trading platform, and a power trading venue. This remarkable transformation was highlighted by Euronext joining the CAC 40, France’s blue-chip index, in September 2025.

### Early Years

Before joining Euronext, Boujnah was head of continental Europe at Santander Global Banking and Markets. He describes his first years as CEO as very different from now, mainly having to deal with “issues, problems and crises.”

“The previous CEO resigned six months after the initial public offering and my chief financial officer resigned six weeks before the first capital markets day,” he added.

Euronext had returned to being an independent company in June 2014 when it went public in a spin-off from Intercontinental Exchange (ICE). Back in 2007, the New York Stock Exchange acquired Euronext to create the first transatlantic stock and derivatives exchange. However, when ICE subsequently acquired NYSE Euronext in 2013, the European equities business was considered surplus to requirements.

“When ICE carved out the European equities business, European stock exchanges were seen as museums,” said Boujnah. “The first focus was on survival as the capital market infrastructure landscape in Europe was being derailed by the potential deal between London Stock Exchange and Deutsche Börse.”

### Diversifying Revenue

In 2014, nearly half (48%) of Euronext’s total annual revenue of €458 million was related to trading, according to the firm. Boujnah said it was critical for Euronext to become more profitable given that 65% of volume was related to equities trading.

He added, “This required rebuilding and one of the most important factors was for the management team and the people to have pride in the project.”

In contrast, Euronext reported total revenue for the third quarter of this year which was nearly as high as the whole of 2014 at €438.1 million, but the majority (60%) was non-volume related. On the results call, Boujnah emphasised that this was Euronext’s sixth consecutive quarter of double-digit topline growth.

Euronext also reached a new record of €7.5 trillion in assets under custody in the third quarter of this year, driven by growth in equities and bonds. Boujnah said this reflected the strength and growth of the post-trade business.

Volume-related business was fuelled by double-digit growth in fixed income and commodities trading and clearing, according to Euronext.

Boujnah added, “Euronext continues to record robust volumes and revenue capture in cash equity trading and clearing, driving revenue up 11.5% year-on-year.”

### Acquisitions

This diversification has been accelerated through a series of strategic acquisitions.

In 2014, the majority of Euronext’s revenue (58%) came from France. Today, France is second behind Italy—one of the geographies added to the group since 2014 alongside Denmark, Ireland, and Norway.

“Euronext’s federal model had originally been envisaged as open-ended,” said Boujnah. “This model for European integration was critical for our survival and allowed us to become a serial acquirer.”

Boujnah highlighted the acquisition of Oslo Bors in 2019. “A defining moment was when we punched above our weight to buy Oslo Bors against Nasdaq as nobody thought we would make it,” he added. “We had instilled a culture of survivors and fighters.”

The acquisition of Borsa Italiana Group from London Stock Exchange Group in 2021 was transformative. It allowed Euronext to accelerate geographic diversification, expand horizontally with new asset classes such as fixed income through bond trading platform MTS, and grow vertically by adding clearing.

Euronext offered the same price as Germany’s Deutsche Börse for Borsa Italiana, according to Boujnah. During the first call about the deal, he told David Schwimmer, chief executive of LSEG, that Euronext could offer superior certainty of execution and partnership with Italian stakeholders through its federal model.

“We had prepared for years to buy Borsa Italiana which we regarded as a ‘must have’,” he added. “We had to fix clearing as we were the only important European exchange without our own CCP.”

### ATHEX Acquisition

Euronext is in the process of adding another local market to its federal model. On November 13, 2025, Greek regulators approved Euronext’s offer to buy ATHEX Group, the operator of the Greek capital market.

“Our offer for ATHEX Group is a step towards consolidation of European market infrastructure to support European listings and economic growth and create an even deeper liquidity pool in Europe,” added Boujnah. “This transaction is clearly a sign of confidence in the recovery of the Greek economy.”

Euronext expects to deliver €12 million of annual cash synergies by the end of 2028 from integrating ATHEX into its European market infrastructure, single liquidity pool, single order book, and single technology platform.

The offer is open until November 17, 2025, and Boujnah said Euronext does not intend to change the price of the offer. The company will communicate the results of its tender offer on November 19, 2025.

### European Consolidation

In October this year, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz called for the establishment of a single European stock exchange so that companies can access financing within the region, without having to list in the U.S.

Boujnah welcomed Merz’s comments, which echoed the aspirations of Christine Lagarde, president of the European Central Bank.

He said, “We share that vision and we are available to contribute to the next phase of potential consolidation within Europe.”

Boujnah argued that Euronext provides a solution to fragmentation in Europe with its single liquidity pool, single technology platform, and in post-trade through the convergence of its central securities depositories (CSDs), slated for September 2026.

Euronext has announced the consolidation of the settlement of equity trades and ETFs in its Amsterdam, Brussels, and Paris markets under Euronext Securities. These markets will join those already supported by Euronext Securities in Lisbon, Milan, and Oslo.

“The total market capitalization of companies on our integrated European exchange is €6.5 trillion, which is twice that of companies listed on LSE and more than three times that of companies listed on Deutsche Börse,” he said.

Boujnah added that Euronext could offer both LSEG and Deutsche Börse a structure to let their listing and equity businesses join the Euronext model, and have a stake in Euronext as a counterpart, ensuring federal governance.

He concluded, “Airbus became a global competitor to Boeing and shows we can succeed by pulling together.” Airbus was formed as a consortium of European aerospace companies from France, West Germany, Great Britain, and Spain in 1970 to compete with American-built airliners.

### Future Growth

On the third-quarter results call, Boujnah described Euronext as being at a “cornerstone moment” for the group in terms of industrial developments, with all its teams fully engaged to deliver the “ambitious” targets of the Innovate for Growth 2027 strategic plan.

The group recently launched the first fully integrated European marketplace for ETFs, which it said will provide substantial efficiency gains for the entire value chain.

To boost retail participation, Euronext has introduced the first mini cash-settled futures on main European government bonds, which Boujnah said have been trading from day one.

“In order to maintain our growth dynamic, we need to avoid the Kodak moment and stay relevant, while not burning cash on too many buzz-word driven innovations,” said Boujnah.

He argued that new technology has to be transformative and “allow you to eat your competitors’ lunch.” For him, this could be quantum computing.

Boujnah expects to leave Euronext in May 2027 at the end of his contract. He said, “I think I would like to do another job that makes me continue to feel alive, transform things and have a tangible impact.”
https://www.marketsmedia.com/euronext-transforms-over-a-decade/

Toxic ex-boyfriend pressures woman to give away her cat, tells her he’s already promised the cat to his neighbor

Break-ups can be messy affairs, especially when there is animosity from one or both sides. They often lead to petty arguments and resentment. However, sometimes things can go too far—like threatening to take your partner’s cat and give it to your neighbor. This is exactly what happened to one woman on TikTok.

Describing the break-up with her ex-boyfriend from hell, Natalie claims that the cat they got together just before things fell apart became a major point of contention between her and her ex. It wasn’t that the ex wanted the cat for himself (which would at least be somewhat understandable); rather, he went behind Natalie’s back and promised the cat to his neighbor, whose own cat had recently passed away.

Naturally, Natalie wasn’t inclined to agree with this plan. She had grown fond of the cat and was fully ready to care for it on her own. However, her boyfriend argued that she wasn’t capable of doing so and accused her of being selfish for not giving the cat away.

Natalie had also been paying for the cat’s vet bills and covering other expenses. Though they had gotten the cat together, at this point, the cat was hers.

Despite Natalie’s refusal, her ex was insistent. He even got his mom to message Natalie in an attempt to guilt-trip her into giving away the cat to a stranger. Despite this pressure, Natalie held strong. When commenters later asked if she had kept the cat, she confirmed that she had.

The harassment campaign left Natalie feeling paranoid. While she had allowed her ex around a few times to watch the cat, she now worried that he or his mom might try to “cat-nap” her pet, which she said was the only source of happiness during that difficult period. Thankfully, that never happened.

In another video, Natalie posed with her cat, named Mako. The fact that her ex and his mom were so insistent—going as far as making promises to their neighbor without consulting her—shows how vindictive they truly were. It’s clear this wasn’t about doing the right thing or helping out a neighbor; it seems more like a ploy by the ex to hurt Natalie by any means possible.

Commenters pointed out that the neighbor could have easily adopted another cat from one of the many animals in shelters. “Why did they care so much?” one asked. Another simply wrote, “If it’s your name on the vet bills, the cat is yours. End of story.”
https://wegotthiscovered.com/social-media/toxic-ex-boyfriend-pressures-woman-to-give-away-her-cat-tells-her-hes-already-promised-the-cat-to-his-neighbor/

Deeper airline problems exacerbated by record-long shutdown

The government shutdown may have ended, but problems that were already plaguing U.S. airports and airlines before the 43-day lapse in funding are far from over.

“Airlines cannot flip a switch and resume normal operations immediately after a vote — there will be residual effects for days,” said former New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu (R), now…
https://thehill.com/regulation/transportation/5605643-government-shutdown-faa-staffing-tech-problems-impact/

Hezbollah’s Quiet Rebuild: Iran’s Shadowy Lifeline and the Gathering Storm on Israel’s Northern Flank

Financial Lifelines and Sanctions The November 5 announcement from the U. S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) targeted key elements of Hezbollah’s financial network. These funds, exploiting Lebanon’s cash-heavy, regulation-light economy, bankrolled everything from paramilitary salaries to the reconstruction of terror infrastructure battered by Israeli strikes. Under Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, John Hurley, didn’t mince words: For Lebanon to emerge “free, prosperous, and secure,” Hezbollah must be “fully disarmed and cut off from Iran’s funding and control.” Matthew Levitt, a senior fellow and director of the counterterrorism and intelligence program at The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, and a former counterterrorism intelligence analyst for the FBI, points out that despite sanctions, Iran’s financial backing is pivotal to Hezbollah’s survival and operational reach. “We assume Iran still provides about the same amount of money, but Hezbollah is having a harder time getting it through on a timely basis. They can’t just ship it from Iran or Iraq anymore without inspections, so they rely more on diaspora networks in South America and Africa,” he tells The Cipher Brief. “All of this is against the backdrop of severe setbacks. Hezbollah intends to continue positioning itself to not only fight militarily but also assert an oversized, dominant position within Lebanon by virtue of force.” A Battered Front, But Not Broken The Israel-Hezbollah war, which ignited in 2023 alongside the war in Gaza, decimated the organization’s leadership, weapons arsenal, and fighting ranks, with more than 3, 000 of its fighters killed. The decapitation strikes were surgical: On September 27 last year, an Israeli airstrike flattened Hezbollah’s Beirut headquarters, killing Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah, the group’s iron-fisted architect of asymmetric warfare. In the ensuing ground incursion, Israeli forces dismantled border launch sites and command bunkers, leaving Hezbollah’s Radwan Force, the elite unit tasked with infiltrating Galilee, reeling. Yet, as analysts caution, Hezbollah is battered but not broken. A number of its battle-hardened fighters, who cut their teeth supporting the Assad regime in Syria, are now integrating into civilian life, ready to rearm at any time. Furthermore, the group’s Shia base, which comprises roughly 31 percent of the Lebanese population, remains loyal to Hezbollah, upheld by its wide-reaching welfare networks amid a country grappling with a crumbling economy. These moves indicate that Hezbollah’s military recovery is already well underway. “Hezbollah is giving much more attention than before the war to its Badr Unit, positioned north of the Litani River, and strengthening it with Radwan forces,” Sarít Zehavi, senior researcher at the Alma Research and Educational Center, tells The Cipher Brief. “They are also shifting from smuggling to local manufacturing of drones and missiles. Even though some brigades are not yet redeployed to the border, they continue training and rebuilding capabilities.” The Badr Unit, a key element of Hezbollah’s northern forces, has become the group’s tactical spearhead along the Litani River and near the Israeli border. Tasked with reconnaissance, border infiltration, and rapid response, the unit has been reinforced with Radwan-trained fighters and advanced drone capabilities. Badr is central to Hezbollah’s evolving doctrine of “strategic latency,” maintaining a persistent threat without provoking full-scale war, and acts as a bridge between conventional militia operations and the group’s clandestine drone and cyber activities. Moreover, Lebanon’s political deadlock increases the risk that Hezbollah will maintain its military dominance. The Beirut government, assembled hastily earlier this year under President Joseph Aoun, is characterized as the least Hezbollah-affiliated in years, with a focus on reclaiming national independence from the dominant insurgents. There is, however, significant skepticism about how such a push is enforced. Hezbollah continues to rebuff key appointments, and its diminished but growing stockpile, estimated at 20, 000 remaining rockets, hangs over Beirut’s ambitions. This hybrid threat presents a national security nightmare for Washington: a non-state actor wielding state power, rendering diplomacy incredibly difficult. Need a daily dose of reality on national and global security issues? Subscriber to The Cipher Brief’s Nightcap newsletter, delivering expert insights on today’s events right to your inbox. Sign up for free today. Iran’s Evolving Logistical Pipelines Tehran’s shadow looms largest. The IRGC-Quds Force, Hezbollah’s ideological leader since 1982, has poured over $1 billion into the group this year alone, per Treasury disclosures despite layered U. S. sanctions biting into Iran’s oil exports. However, a source familiar with the U. S. Office of Foreign Assets Control told The Cipher Brief on background that tracking Iran’s funds has become increasingly challenging in recent months. “The Treasury and State Departments need more resources to track violations, and the government shutdown left many investigators sidelined,” the source observed. “Congress can help by requiring reports on Iranian weapons shipments and funding enforcement teams.” The Iranian cash flows through hawala networks and Beirut’s labyrinthine exchange houses, where operatives like Jaber convert petrodollars into untraceable Lebanese pounds. It’s a masterclass in sanctions evasion: Iran’s regime, squeezed by domestic protests and a rial in freefall, prioritizes its “Axis of Resistance” over breadlines at home. “Assad’s downfall severely crimped Hezbollah’s pipeline from Tehran, but even so, Hezbollah and Iran remain adept at exploiting fragile states. Beirut and Damascus show some interest in interdiction. Still, both are weak governments, and they have other priorities,” Jonathan Ruhe, Director of Foreign Policy at the JINSA Gemunder Center for Defense & Strategy, tells The Cipher Brief. “Iran also exploits power vacuums in Sudan and Libya to resupply Hezbollah from the sea, using surreptitious maritime tactics like Iran’s sanctions-busting ‘shadow fleets.’” Post-war Syria has forced Tehran to improvise. The once-feared land bridge stretching from Iran through Iraq and Syria to Lebanon has been battered by Israeli airstrikes and rebel attacks, yet parts of it still survive. To bolster its Middle East proxy, the Iranian regime has upped its use of maritime routes. Iranian cargo ships dock at Syria’s Tartus port under civilian manifests, offloading drone kits and rocket fuel disguised as fertilizer. Trucks then traverse the unguarded border into Lebanon’s Qalamoun Mountains, often chaperoned by IRGC advisors. Domestically, however, Hezbollah is reducing reliance on imports. Clandestine factories in Beirut’s Dahiyeh suburbs and Bekaa orchards churn out refurbished Kornet anti-tank missiles and Ababil drones from scavenged parts. There is a reported network of 50-plus workshops, some powered by smuggled Chinese microchips, slashing reliance on vulnerable sea lanes. Despite its own economic ailments, Tehran continues to give precedence to Hezbollah’s position as a frontline deterrent over short-term financial stability. Rebuilding the Arsenal: From Ashes to Drones Israeli assessments estimate Hezbollah has reclaimed just 20 percent of its pre-war precision arsenal, but what emerges is nimbler and deadlier in specific domains. Drones top the list: low-cost Shahed-136 clones, assembled from Iranian blueprints and Syrian-sourced engines, can loiter over Galilee for hours, scouting IDF positions or delivering 50 kg (110pounds) warheads. Short-range Fajr-5 rockets, concealable in olive groves, are proliferating under civilian camouflage mosques, schools, even UNIFIL outposts. Smuggling remains vital. Iran’s military equipment, including advanced components for precision-guided missiles (PGMs), is first transported into Syria using an array of methods designed to evade international scrutiny. Non-descript convoys then travel from Syria’s Homs City to the border city of Al-Qusayr near Lebanon. The Syrian-Lebanese border in the Homs/Al-Qusayr area is porous, mountainous, and complex to police. Over the course of this year, Israel has conducted more than 40 strikes intercepting shipments near the southern coast of the city of Tyre. Yet the cat-and-mouse game favors smugglers. Private companies, fronts for IRGC logistics, reportedly run nighttime operations mixing weapons with sacks of flour labeled as aid. “Even before October 7, Hezbollah tried to make precision munitions with Iranian help,” Ruhe noted. “Tehran is now redoubling these efforts. For all Israel’s successes over the last two years, it struggled to wage a multifront war of attrition, and it struggled to defeat Hezbollah’s drones. Hezbollah and Iran want to exploit this exact weakness by being able to oversaturate Israeli defenses with mass drone swarms, similar to what Iran helps Russia do against Ukraine.” Indeed, Hezbollah’s rebuilding of its ranks is quieter but no less strategic. After losing an estimated 5, 000 to 7, 000 fighters, the group now runs “resistance summer camps” in the Litani Valley, teaching teenagers bomb-making and cyber tactics under the guise of community service. Morale has waned, but ideology endures: recruits draw strength from chants of Nasrallah’s martyrdom. Are you Subscribed to The Cipher Brief’s Digital Channel on YouTube? There is no better place to get clear perspectives from deeply experienced national security experts. The Long Game: Shadows on the Northern Border For Israel, the situation is a high-stakes strategic battle. Prime Minister Netanyahu’s cabinet has stepped up its drone strikes into Lebanon in recent weeks, and preemptive raids to enforce ceasefire arms restrictions are not off the table. Nonetheless, Hezbollah leaders in November rejected talks, and in an official letter to the Lebanese government, insisted that “any attempt at political negotiations with Israel does not serve Lebanon’s national interest.” The statement both rallies supporters and signals Tehran’s firm stance. Iran’s approach is one of “strategic latency” maintaining a constant, restrained threat to deter Israel without triggering all-out war. The United States also has global interests at risk. Hezbollah’s networks extend into Latin America and Africa, where they help launder money through drug and diamond trades. Those funds could support operations that reach U. S. soil. Washington’s current strategy including a $230 million-plus aid package to Lebanon tied to reforms aims to cut off Hezbollah’s financial base. This fragile financial and operational landscape underscores that, despite international efforts, Hezbollah’s on-the-ground capabilities remain resilient and difficult to fully contain. A spokesperson for the U. S. Department of State tells The Cipher Brief that while “the Government of Lebanon made a courageous and historic decision to restore state authority by ordering the disarming of Hezbollah and establishing the Lebanese Armed Forces and Internal Security Forces as the legitimate forces for Lebanon, the credibility of Lebanon’s government rests on its ability to transform words into action.” “The region and world are watching carefully,” the spokesperson continued. “Disarming Hezbollah and other non-state actors, as well as ending Iran’s proxy activities, is crucial to ensuring peace in Lebanon and across the region. The United States of America commends the Government of Lebanon’s efforts to ensure Lebanon is sovereign, peaceful, prosperous, and safe for all Lebanese people.” Zehavi also pointed to the gap between hopes for disarmament and reality. “The Lebanese Army is not entering villages and into the private properties where Hezbollah is actually hiding its weapons down,” she explained. “If this continues this way, and it looks like this is where it is going, what we will see is a very unstable situation.” Lebanon, however, may face the most direct consequences. Hezbollah functions as both a militia and a provider of social services. Several of its clinics are also used as bunkers, and Tehran-financed roads routinely lead to new depots and launch locations. As Zehavi highlights, Hezbollah is rebuilding on two fronts: strengthening its military infrastructure while expanding civilian programs to maintain local support. The organization, experts say, is not right now preparing for a major offensive but focuses on smaller, ongoing operations perhaps cyberattacks on Haifa’s ports, sniper fire along the border, and drone swarms testing Israel’s defenses. Iran’s proxy strategy remains intact despite sanctions and setbacks. Yet, according to Ruhe, if the United States, Europe, and Arab partners enforce UN sanctions on Iran’s rearming of Hezbollah and back Beirut, a better-than-status-quo scenario is possible. “(But) if Hezbollah and Iran believe Beirut is alone, and that Israel will be isolated for acting militarily, then it’s a matter of when not if Hezbollah recovers,” he continued. “And the more successfully it helps Hezbollah rebuild, the more likely Iran will test Israeli and U. S. resolve with its own rearmament.” For Western policymakers, the objectives are clear: disrupt Hezbollah’s finances, bolster Lebanon’s government, and limit the group’s military power. Otherwise, the risk grows of a wider northern conflict that could draw in larger powers.
https://www.thecipherbrief.com/hezbollah-quiet-rebuild

BTC Traders Eye $98K As All Supports Vanish

Bitcoin’s (BTC) price has struggled to regain momentum following Wednesday’s drop to $100,700, leaving BTC down roughly 3. 5% on the weekly candle. Market data shows long-term holders have sold more than 815, 000 BTC over the past 30 days, intensifying the focus on lower liquidity pockets. Analysts now point to the June 2025 lows near $98,000 as the next likely target if volatility accelerates. Key takeaways: Liquidity clusters show downside pressure building near $98,000 for Bitcoin. A fourth retest of $102,000 to $100,000 support signals a weakening structure. Futures trader positioning remains long-heavy despite rising technical risks. BTC liquidity compression intensifies downside focus Analysts tracking BTC’s liquidity map highlight a widening imbalance between support and overhead resistance. Trader Daan Crypto noted that a “large cluster of liquidity sits below the local lows at $98,000-$100,000,” adding that this aligns with the series of marginally higher lows that have formed above the zone. The trader also pointed to major upside levels at $108,000 and $112,000 but stressed that only the former is currently actionable given the market structure, with whichever band breaks first likely triggering a sharp squeeze. Futures trader Byzantine General echoed the sentiment, observing that current price behavior suggests Bitcoin “is likely to sweep the lows around $98,000.” Supporting this view, CoinGlass data shows nearly $1. 3 billion in cumulative long leveraged liquidity concentrated at the $98,000 level, a steep rise from earlier in the week, while futures traders had previously aimed for upside liquidity near $110, 000, following the recent flush below $100,000 last Friday. Related: Crypto most ‘fearful’ since March as Bitcoin eyes one-year lows versus gold Repeated support retests deepen structural risk Bitcoin has now tested the $102,000-$100,000 support band for the fourth time since the range was first established in May 2025. Multiple retests of the same support often indicate structural exhaustion: Each subsequent visit weakens buyer conviction, reduces resting bid liquidity and increases the likelihood of a breakdown. Analyst UBCrypto noted that the latest move resembled a failed breakout, adding that it is “not a level worth buying into” until price confirms strength, even if that means re-entering a few percentage points higher. Despite this, data from Hyblock Capital shows that long positioning remains dominant, with 68. 9% of global BTC orders leaning long on Binance, indicating that many traders continue to trust the $100,000 floor. However, both the daily and weekly charts reflect a softness at higher time frames, increasing the likelihood of a liquidity sweep toward $98,000, even as deeper order book support appears to be stacked above the current price. Related: Bitcoin’s second-largest whale accumulation fails to push BTC past $106K This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.
https://bitcoinethereumnews.com/bitcoin/btc-traders-eye-98k-as-all-supports-vanish/

Coinbase Ventures-Backed Supra Offers $1M Bounty to Beat Its Parallel EVM Execution Engine

**Supra CEO Joshua Tobkin Offers $1 Million Personal Bounty for Faster EVM-Parallel Execution Engine**

Joshua Tobkin, CEO and Co-Founder of Supra, has pledged up to $1 million worth of his own UPRA tokens as a personal bounty. This reward is open to any developer or research team that can demonstrate a faster, verifiably correct EVM-parallel execution engine than SupraBTM — the core execution engine behind SupraEVM.

Dubbed the **SupraEVM Speed Challenge**, this personal bounty complements an ongoing $40,000 USDC performance-based reward provided by the Supra foundation. So far, no team has surpassed the performance benchmarks set by SupraBTM. It remains the leading engine in public tests against all known EVM-parallel solutions — including Monad, one of the most optimized projects in the high-performance EVM space.

> “I am betting $1 million of my own tokens that no one can beat Supra,” said Joshua Tobkin. “Supra is built on transparency. We claim to be the fastest, so we are aiming to prove it in public. And if someone can demonstrate a superior execution engine under clear conditions, I will honor that outcome directly.”

### Addressing the Core Bottleneck in Blockchain Scalability

While consensus protocols, data availability layers, and oracle infrastructure have improved significantly in recent years, transaction execution remains a fundamental bottleneck limiting the scalability of decentralized applications.

Safe and deterministic parallel execution within the Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM) is especially challenging yet crucial. It enables low-latency DeFi, real-time gaming, and AI-driven autonomous agents to function effectively.

SupraEVM, powered by **SupraBTM (Block Transactional Memory)**, tackles this challenge head-on. Its conflict-specification aware architecture reduces overhead, anticipates transaction collisions, and schedules execution based on statically analyzed dependency graphs — enabling faster and more efficient transaction processing.

### Benchmark Results: SupraBTM Outperforms Monad

SupraBTM was benchmarked on 10,000 Ethereum mainnet blocks and tested directly against Monad’s 2-Phase Execution (2PE) approach using identical commodity hardware (16-core AMD 4564P CPU with 192 GB RAM). The results showed:

– **1.5 to 1.7 times higher throughput** than Monad across various workloads
– Approximately **4 to 7 times speedup** over traditional sequential EVM execution
– Consistent performance under high-conflict scenarios typical in DeFi and arbitrage use cases

Unlike systems relying on speculative execution and frequent rollbacks, SupraBTM employs a deterministic scheduling model adaptable to different thread configurations, avoiding these costly pitfalls.

> “Supra was built from the ground up to integrate execution, consensus, and core infrastructure components into a cohesive framework,” said Jon Jones, CBO and Co-Founder at Supra.
> “The result is an architecture that not only delivers performance but does so in a reproducible and testable way against any known parallel EVM engine today.”

### Challenge Guidelines and Structure

The $1 million token bounty is open to developers or research teams who can demonstrate a faster EVM execution engine under specific test conditions. Entries must meet the following criteria:

– Process **at least 100,000 consecutive Ethereum mainnet blocks**
– Run on commodity hardware with **no more than 16 CPU cores**
– Achieve **at least a 15% performance improvement** across 4-, 8-, and 16-thread configurations
– Publish benchmark results publicly with submissions for community and independent verification
– Release code under an **open-source license** accessible for audit

Participants can claim the reward directly or collaborate further with Supra’s engineering team. The $1 million token reward comes from Tobkin’s personal allocation, scheduled to unlock in 2027 and vest over two years. The prize is entirely independent of Supra’s core operations and treasury.

> “This challenge is focused on the core technical issue that continues to constrain the EVM,” Tobkin added.
> “The objective is to find or validate the most performant execution engine possible. If someone builds a better system than what we’ve achieved at Supra, the industry should recognize it and benefit.”

### Additional Resources

For full technical documentation, challenge rules, and binaries related to the SupraEVM Beta Bounty, visit the dedicated [SupraEVM Speed Challenge docs page](#).

Supra’s technical team has also published a detailed benchmark report comparing SupraBTM and Monad on their website. Developers interested in early access to SupraEVM can join the [waitlist here](#).

### About Supra

Supra is the first blockchain built for **Automatic DeFi (AutoFi)** — an innovative self-operating financial system framework optimized for crypto AI Agents. It is built on a vertically integrated Layer-1 blockchain featuring:

– High-speed native smart contracts
– Built-in price oracles
– System-level automation
– Bridgeless cross-chain messaging

Supra’s vertical stack delivers novel AutoFi primitives that generate fair, recurring protocol revenue, which can be redistributed to reduce reliance on inflationary block rewards over time.

This technology stack equips on-chain AI Agents with the necessary tools to autonomously and securely execute complex DeFi workflows for users — streamlining decentralized finance with automation and intelligence.

*Stay tuned to Supra’s official channels for updates on the SupraEVM Speed Challenge and advancements in high-performance blockchain execution.*
https://chainwire.org/2025/11/14/coinbase-ventures-backed-supra-offers-1m-bounty-to-beat-its-parallel-evm-execution-engine/