100 Years Since the Attack on "St. Nedelya" Church: The Bloodiest Terrorist Act in Bulgarian History
April 16, 1925, remembered as "Bloody Maundy Thursday," marks one of the darkest days in Bulgaria’s modern history
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A new study by Cardiff University has determined that Twitter can be used to identify dangerous situations up to an hour faster than police reports.
Using a dataset of 1.6 million tweets from the London riots in 2011, researchers were able to have a series of machine learning algorithms automatically scan Twitter to identify threats. The system took into account things like the location of the tweet, the frequency of tweets containing certain words (or variants of these words), and timing of the tweets. As the report notes, many existing approaches to event detection are directed toward large-scale events like terror attacks, and it’s much harder to be alerted to smaller incidents like fires or car accidents. Leveraging social media data can solve this gap and also be applied to large-scale events, as well.
Not only could this method augment intelligence-gathering techniques already used by police, but picking up on these smaller events could help predict things like riots before they actually happen. Researchers said their “results show that our system can perform as well as terrestrial sources at detecting events related to the (London) riots; in some cases, we detect the event before intelligence reports were recorded.”
Cardiff’s report confirms that what companies like Dataminr have already been doing for governments and law enforcement clients works: aggregating what people broadcast on social media and turning it into real-time alerts for high-impact events.
The personnel deficit in the Bulgarian Armed Forces stood at 20.5% in 2025, marking a slight improvement of 1.8 percentage points compared to the previous year, according to the Report on the State of Defence and the Armed Forces, approved by the caretake
Acting Defense Minister Atanas Zapryanov has stated that Bulgaria is not taking on any military obligations under the ten-year security cooperation agreement with Ukraine
Acting defense Minister Atanas Zapryanov said that the concept of Bulgaria relying on its own defense outside a collective system would place an unsustainable burden on the country’s economy and public finances
Journalist Hristo Rimpopov told Bulgarian National Radio that there is no basis to assume Bulgaria could become a target of Iranian attacks, following confirmation by the Foreign Ministry that Tehran had sent a diplomatic note concerning the presence of U
Acting Foreign Minister Nadezhda Neynski has stated categorically that Bulgaria will not take part in any military coalition aimed at reopening the Strait of Hormuz, citing the country’s limited capabilities
The Council of Ministers has adopted the Report on the State of Defense and the Armed Forces of the Republic of Bulgaria for 2025, which was submitted to both the National Assembly and the public, outlining an overall assessment of military readiness and
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