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Lowdown Today
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Lowdown Today

Intelligence briefing service at lowdown.today covering rolling global topics on EU-sovereign infrastructure.

Last refreshed: 11 April 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

Why trust a new briefing service auditing an active war?

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Common Questions
What is Lowdown Today?
Lowdown Today is an intelligence briefing service at lowdown.today covering rolling global topics including geopolitics, elections, sport, and technology, built on EU-sovereign infrastructure.Source: Lowdown Today about page
Is Lowdown Today free to read?
Yes, Lowdown Today's briefings and analysis are free to read. Premium access unlocks power tools such as on-demand topic triggers and source attribution.
What topics does Lowdown Today cover?
Lowdown Today publishes rolling briefings on Iran, the Russia-Ukraine war, the 2026 FIFA World Cup, Artemis II, AI labour markets, drones, UK local elections, and US midterms.
How often does Lowdown Today update its briefings?
Lowdown Today runs rolling briefings that update when material developments occur on a covered topic, rather than on a fixed daily cadence.
Is Lowdown Today a newsletter or a website?
Lowdown Today is a web publication at lowdown.today organised by topic, with each rolling briefing accumulating numbered updates as a topic develops.

Background

On 11 April 2026, Lowdown Today published an original-audit finding on the Iran-US war: a Federal Register and OFAC review showing zero formal Iran presidential instruments across 42 days of active conflict. The audit established a ratio of seven discretionary presidential instruments on other policy files to zero on Iran over the same window.

Lowdown Today is an intelligence briefing service at lowdown.today covering rolling global topics including geopolitics, elections, sport, technology, and defence. It publishes active briefings on the Iran conflict, the Russia-Ukraine war, the 2026 FIFA World Cup, Artemis II, AI labour markets, drones, UK local elections, and the US midterms. Content is free to read; premium access unlocks power tools such as on-demand topic triggers, source attribution, and entity enrichment. The service runs on EU-sovereign infrastructure with no US cloud dependencies in the distribution chain.

Lowdown Today's editorial method prioritises first-party primary sources such as the Federal Register, OFAC, CENTCOM, and national foreign ministries, centred on the distinction between what administrations formally do through statutory instruments and what they say through press output. The 42-day Iran audit is a worked example: the statutory record stands at one annual National Emergency renewal and General License U, expiring 19 April 2026, while the rhetorical record is dense. The approach maps the distance between the two registers.