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Under blackout threat, Wikimedia reaches compromise with Indonesia
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'Going to the moon': Irish footballers return to China 50 years after historic tour
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Spurs' Wembanyama ruled out of game 3 after concussion
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Palestinians to vote in first elections since Gaza war
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Pragmatism, not patriotism, pushes young Lithuanians to military service
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Peru confirms election runoff date, court says no to Lima re-vote
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Venezuela, Colombia pledge military cooperation on first post-Maduro visit
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US hopes for progress, but Iran says not direct talks
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Maine governor nixes data center moratorium in state
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Betis's Bellerin further dents Real Madrid title hopes
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Lens rally but title bid fades after draw at Brest
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OpenAI CEO apologizes to Canada town for not reporting mass shooter
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UK PM vows legislation to ban Iran Guards: report
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Leipzig tighten top-four grip as Union's Eta suffers second loss
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Furyk named USA captain for 2027 Ryder Cup
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EU, US sign critical minerals plan to counter China reliance
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The 'housewives' did well -- Ukraine takes drone know-how abroad
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Court removes US businessman from managing his Brazilian football team
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'Natural' birth control risks unwanted pregnancy, experts warn
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No.2 Korda boosts LPGA Chevron lead to seven
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EU trade chief seeks 'positive traction' on US steel tariffs
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Anthropic says Google to pump $40 bn into AI startup
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Kohli makes Gujarat pay as Bengaluru cruise to IPL win
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One injured in bomb attack on Colombia military base
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Envoys from Iran, US expected in Pakistan for new talks
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ILO names US official as number two amid grumbling over unpaid dues
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Son of director Rob Reiner pays tribute to slain parents
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AI united Altman and Musk, then drove them apart
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Sinner overcomes Bonzi in record hunt at Madrid Open
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Havana property market stirs as investors bet on political change
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Children's lives at risk from US funding cuts to vaccine alliance: CEO
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Brazil's Lula has surgery to remove skin lesion from scalp
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Defending champion Alcaraz to miss French Open with wrist injury
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Battle lines drawn over EU's next big budget
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Renewed hopes of Iran peace talks keep oil under $100 per barrel
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Lebanon truce extended as Pakistan bids to revive US-Iran talks
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Assisted dying bill scuppered as UK advocates vow to fight on
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Alex Marquez quickest in Spanish MotoGP practice
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Former New Zealand cricketer Bracewell given two-year ban for cocaine use
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Justice Dept ends criminal probe into US Fed chair Powell
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Merz says no 'immediate' Ukraine EU membership, floats Kyiv joining meetings
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G7 says nature talks a success as climate sidelined for US
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'Hands off': Teddy bear tale teaches French preschoolers consent
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Russia, Ukraine swap 193 POWs
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'We have to be stronger': De Zerbi demands Spurs improve as relegation fears mount
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Man City will not risk Rodri in FA Cup semi-final: Guardiola
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Macron leaves future open as political curtain nears
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Germany launches spying probe into Signal attacks targeting MPs
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Arsenal haven't given up on title despite blowing lead: Arteta
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Injured Spain star Yamal will come back stronger at World Cup: Flick
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Last news
OPEC+ likely to maintain current output levels
Ministers of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allied nations (OPEC+) are expected to keep current output levels unchanged when they meet for online meetings on Sunday, analysts told AFP.
Paris's arthouse cinemas adapt to battle decline
Paris is one of the world's arthouse cinema hotspots, but falling attendance levels mean beloved independent operators must innovate and invest to survive.
Air travel disrupted over Airbus A320 software switch
More airlines around the world announced delayed or cancelled flights Saturday following an Airbus alert that up to 6,000 A320 aircraft may require upgrades.
How successful has OPEC+'s oil output policy been in 2025?
Ministers of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allied nations (OPEC+) are unlikely to make changes to their oil output strategy when they discuss production at an online ministerial meeting on Sunday.
Inch by inch: the search for Mexico's disappeared in a city cemetery
Elizabeth Alvarez has been searching for her brother since 2013, when the 31-year-old left his home to run an errand in Mexico City.
How Much Do Dental Fillings Cost Without Insurance?
NEW YORK CITY, NEW YORK / ACCESS Newswire / November 29, 2025 / If you've ever had a cavity, you know how important it is to get a dental filling installed as soon as possible. Leaving a cavity untreated allows nasty bacteria to get in, leading to infection and potentially the loss of the tooth. Getting a filling is a straightforward process that helps protect your teeth and can often be completed in a single appointment. However, cost can be a concern, especially if you don't have dental insurance. Continue reading to discover how much a dental filling might cost and learn how to save money while still receiving high-quality care.
Stocks rise in thin post-Thanksgiving trading
Global stocks mostly rose Friday, extending a positive winning streak based in part on expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates again next month.
Crowds, bargains greet US shoppers on 'Black Friday'
The annual "Black Friday" kickoff to the US holiday shopping season drew crowds Friday as millions of Americans seized on the time-tested custom at physical stores and through e-commerce.
Air travel faces disruptions over A320 software switch
Air passengers have been warned of potential travel disruptions following an Airbus alert on Friday that up to 6,000 operational A320 aircraft may require upgrades.
Rebel nuns win reprieve in Austrian convent dispute
Three nuns in their 80s who made headlines after fleeing their care home to take back their convent in Austria are being allowed to stay there "until further notice", church officials said Friday.
Stocks rise in thin Thanksgiving trading
Wall Street and key European equity markets rose on Friday in thin US holiday weekend trading, with a key US exchange suffering an outage.
Belgian PM digs in against EU push to use Russian assets for Ukraine
Belgium's Prime Minister Bart De Wever has called an EU plan to use frozen Russian assets to fund Ukraine "fundamentally wrong", throwing further doubt on a push to agree the move next month.
Hong Kong's bamboo scaffolding under scrutiny after fatal fire
Dozens of deaths in an inferno at a Hong Kong residential estate have ignited debate over the role the city's quintessential bamboo scaffolding played in the fire's spread, as the government promised to phase it out.
India economic growth beats forecasts but tariffs loom
India's economy grew faster than expected in the last quarter, official data showed Friday, but the impact from US tariffs is expected to bite in the rest of the financial year.
Rebel octogenarian Austrian nuns win reprieve
Three rebel nuns in their 80s who made headlines after fleeing their care home to take back their Austrian convent are being allowed to stay in the nunnery "until further notice", church officials said Friday.
Markets muted in thin trade, hit by data centre glitch
Stock markets were little changed Friday, capping a solid week driven by expectations of more US rate cuts, with trading thinned by the Thanksgiving holiday and a data centre outage.
Most Asian markets build on week's rally
Most markets squeezed out gains Friday at the end of a strong week for equities fuelled by growing expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates again next month.
Court clears South Korean worker of stealing 73-cent snacks
A worker accused of "stealing" snacks worth less than a dollar in South Korea has finally been acquitted after a legal battle lasting nearly two years.
China says humanoid robot buzz carries bubble risk
More than 150 Chinese companies are making humanoid robots but a market bubble risks forming in the rapidly growing futuristic industry, a Beijing official has warned.
Trump says Venezuela anti-drug operations 'by land' to begin 'soon'
US President Donald Trump said Thursday that efforts to halt Venezuelan drug trafficking "by land" would begin "very soon," further ratcheting up tensions with Caracas, which claims the anti-drug campaign aims at regime change.
Laser Photonics Received NASDAQ Notice of Delisting or Failure to Satisfy a Continued Listing Rule or Standard
ORLANDO, FL / ACCESS Newswire / November 28, 2025 / Laser Photonics Corporation (LPC) (NASDAQ:LASE), a leading global industrial developer of CleanTech Laser Systems for laser cleaning and other applications, today announced that on November 20, 2025, it received a notice from Nasdaq Listing Qualifications department of the Nasdaq Stock Market LLC ("Nasdaq") stating that since it had not received the Company's Form 10-Q for the period ended September 30, 2025, the Company does not comply with Nasdaq's Listing Rules for continued listing. Nasdaq stated that the Company has until January 19, 2026, to submit a plan to regain compliance with respect to the delinquent report. Nasdaq can grant an exception to allow the Company to regain compliance up to a maximum of 180 calendar days from the due date of the Form 10-Q or May 19, 2026.
Dubai Built the Infrastructure, SMX Gave It the Proof and Now the World is Paying Attention
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 28, 2025 / Dubai has spent years building the most sophisticated commodity ecosystem in the Middle East, but the real shift did not happen with new free zones or massive logistics hubs. It happened when the DMCC began redefining itself as the global center of material verification. That shift accelerated when SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) introduced molecular identity technology that gives metals, minerals, and industrial materials a permanent signature. Once Dubai recognized that identity could live inside the material instead of on a certificate, it understood the opportunity sitting in front of it. The future of global trade will belong to the region that can prove what moves through its ports.
SMX is Giving Plastics the One Thing the Market Never Saw: Proof
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 28, 2025 / The global plastics system has lived with the same recurring flaw for decades. No one could reliably verify what was truly recycled, what was partially recycled, and what was simply being passed off as recycled. Brands made claims. Auditors tried to keep pace. Regulators issued mandates. Yet the underlying reality never changed. Plastic loses its identity the moment it enters the waste stream. SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) introduced a permanent fix by embedding molecular-level memory into plastics. Once the marker is applied, the material retains its identity through collection, sorting, reprocessing, pelletizing, and remanufacturing.
The Rare Earth Industry Finally Has a Way to Prove the Truth Behind Its Materials: SMX
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 28, 2025 / The rare earth sector has spent years trying to solve a problem that has grown more complicated as the supply chain expanded. Ores are mined in one region, processed in another, separated in a third, and upgraded again before reaching a magnet plant. By the time a finished component comes to market, the material's origin story is usually reduced to paperwork and assumptions. SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) introduced a breakthrough that rewrites that reality. Its molecular-level verification system gives rare earth elements a permanent identity that carries through every transformation. Once a marker is embedded, it survives crushing, leaching, roasting, purification, and final manufacturing.
The Refinery Reset: How SMX is Becoming the Global Standard for Honest Recycling
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 28, 2025 / Recycling has never been a trust-based system. It has been a belief-based system. Companies believe recycled content is accurate. Regulators believe declarations are honest. Buyers believe certifications reflect reality. SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) is ending that belief model by giving metals and plastics a molecular identity that survives every processing stage. It turns recycled materials into self-verifying assets that carry their truth from scrap yard to finished product.
The SMX Technology Driving Dubai’s Precious Metal's PROOF-Based Takeover
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 28, 2025 / Dubai has been strengthening its position in global commodities for years, but something changed when the DMCC began evolving from a bustling marketplace into a center of verification. That evolution is fast because Dubai sees what others are still trying to grasp. Markets only operate at full velocity when certainty is built into the material itself. SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) is providing that certainty. Its molecular-level identification system gives metals, minerals, and industrial feedstocks a durable identity that survives extraction, refining, transport, and trading.
SMX Gives Strategic Rare Earth Minerals an Immutable Identity
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 28, 2025 / The rare earth industry has spent years circling the same problem. Minerals move through too many borders, too many processors, and too many chemical transformations to maintain a trustworthy origin story. By the time a rare earth oxide becomes a magnet or an alloy, the truth behind it has been diluted by paperwork, assumptions, and gaps no one can independently verify. SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) introduced a different path. It placed identity inside the material itself, embedding a molecular signature that survives every physical and chemical stage from mined ore to final component.
The Supply Chain Cold War: How SMX Gives Western Industries the Proof They Have Been Missing
NEW YORK CITY, NEW YORK / ACCESS Newswire / November 28, 2025 / The world has entered a supply chain cold war where data, authenticity, and material truth matter more than speed or scale. Western companies are discovering they cannot compete with state-controlled systems unless they can verify the origin and purity of the materials they depend on. SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) stepped into this gap with molecular-level verification that embeds identity directly into metals, minerals, and industrial feedstocks. It gives Western manufacturers the clarity they have been missing for years.
The Anti-Counterfeit Industrial War: How SMX Builds the First Molecular Firewall for Global Trade
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 28, 2025 / Counterfeit goods used to be a retail headache. Now they have evolved into an industrial threat that reaches deep into metals, electronics, automotive components, medical devices, and high-value engineered parts. SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) stepped into this escalating crisis with a molecular-level solution that the market has never seen at scale. Its material marking technology transforms raw inputs into self-authenticating units that reveal whether a component is genuine, recycled, repurposed or substituted at any stage of the supply chain.
Gold’s Transparency Reckoning: How SMX is Eliminating the Shadow Zones Inside the Global Bullion Trade
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 28, 2025 / Gold's reputation has always depended on confidence. Investors trust that bars are pure. Banks trust that sourcing is ethical. Exchanges trust that origin records are accurate. Yet the global bullion system still has gaps large enough for uncertainty to hide. SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) is closing those gaps by embedding molecular identity directly into gold and silver, giving each bar a signature that survives melting, recycling, and recasting. It turns bullion from a belief-based asset into a self-authenticating material.
Precious Metals are Becoming Data Assets: How SMX Turns Bullion Into Self-Reporting Materials
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 28, 2025 / For most of history, gold has behaved like a silent asset. It sits in vaults. It moves through refineries. It trades between institutions. Yet it never carries its own proof. SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) changed that by embedding molecular-level identifiers directly into gold and silver, turning them into materials capable of confirming their own origin, purity, and recycling history. It gives precious metals a digital truth woven into their physical structure.
Rare Earth Reality Check: How SMX Finally Gives Strategic Minerals a Proven Identity
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 28, 2025 / The rare earth sector has spent the past decade trying to answer a question that never had a reliable solution. How do you prove where a mineral truly comes from when it passes through multiple countries, multiple processors, and multiple stages before it becomes a usable component? SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) stepped into that uncertainty with molecular-level identity for rare earth elements, giving them a signature that survives crushing, separation, purification, and final manufacturing.