What started as an online joke has now spilled onto the streets of India’s capital. Since Saturday, Abhijeet Dipke, the founder of the satirical Cockroach Janta Party, has been camped out in the heart of New Delhi, leading a crowd of protesters who are refusing to leave until the country’s education minister resigns over a national exam system mired in scandal. “We are here for the long haul, no matter how many days it takes,” Dipke told CNN from the protest site on this week, as dozens gathered around him in support. “We are going to be here until Dharmendra Pradhan resigns.”
https://edition.cnn.com/2026/06/26/india/india-cockroach-janta-party-delhi-protest-intl-hnk
For as long as there have been tests in schools, students have found ways to cheat, whether it is peeking over a classmate’s shoulder or scribbling notes on a palm or crib sheet. But as technology evolves and pressure builds for a top grade, students are now turning to AI-powered smart glasses to get an upper hand. And in East Asia’s test-obsessed societies, where a single exam could impact the trajectory of a student’s future career and social status, educators are scrambling to get ahead of the problem. Twice last month, people in South Korea taking an exam to assess their English language skills - the results of which are often used to make hiring decisions - were caught using smart glasses.
https://edition.cnn.com/2026/06/26/asia/ai-glasses-cheating-exams-intl-hnk
A papyrus scroll that was burned and carbonized when Mount Vesuvius erupted almost 2,000 years ago has been virtually unrolled and partially deciphered with the help of artificial intelligence. The scroll — named PHerc. 1667 — is one of hundreds from the ancient Roman town of Herculaneum, which was buried under volcanic debris when Mount Vesuvius erupted in 79 AD, according to the Vesuvius Challenge, an initiative focused on decoding the texts of the Herculaneum scrolls without needing to physically unroll them. Preserved under mud and ash in a villa believed to have once been owned by the father-in-law of Julius Caesar, the scrolls were discovered by an Italian farmer in the 18th century. The collection is the only large-scale library known to have survived from classical antiquity.
https://edition.cnn.com/2026/06/26/science/papyrus-scroll-vesuvius-ai-scli-intl
On Friday afternoon a small plane appeared to evade some of the world’s strictest aviation controls and slam into the tallest skyscraper in Beijing, the 109-story CITIC Tower that dominates the city’s skyline, killing the pilot and injuring 13 other people. The crash sent shards of glass and aircraft debris plummeting hundreds of feet down to the streets below as office workers left for the weekend, causing panic in the heart of China’s most protected city. A short while later, it was like nothing had happened.
https://edition.cnn.com/2026/06/27/china/beijing-plane-crash-citic-tower-censorship-china-intl-hnk
Steve Crook squints through the sun, scanning his surroundings with precision. “I’m very picky,” he says. Bachelorettes and dog walkers and bag-juggling shoppers are identified, assessed and disregarded. “They have to be physically attractive,” Crook says plainly. “I’m a bit of a Barbie guy, really — long legs and big boobs and slim.” Then, she appears: a young woman, laughing with her friends on this picturesque street lined with stylish shops. The mission begins.
https://edition.cnn.com/2026/06/27/us/dating-camp-nashville-masculinity-manosphere