<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title>X5H Knowledge</title><link>https://www.x5h.net/</link><description>Readable knowledge briefs.</description><item><title>Livestream “special-supply liquor” claims are a consumer-literacy warning</title><link>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-special-supply-liquor-livestream-consumer-literacy.html</link><guid>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-special-supply-liquor-livestream-consumer-literacy.html</guid><description>Reports about illegal liquor sellers using coded livestream language show how misleading scarcity stories can push consumers into fast purchases. The knowledge lesson is to slow down, check labels and treat vague privilege claims as risk signals.</description></item><item><title>Road-maintenance funding debate shows why “fair fees” need system thinking</title><link>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-road-maintenance-ev-fee-fairness.html</link><guid>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-road-maintenance-ev-fee-fairness.html</guid><description>A discussion about whether electric vehicles should share road-maintenance costs points to a broader public-finance lesson: infrastructure funding works best when fees match use, policy goals and administrative reality.</description></item><item><title>One posted photo can become a serious information-security failure</title><link>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-confidential-photo-leak-information-security.html</link><guid>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-confidential-photo-leak-information-security.html</guid><description>A reported case in which a staff member posted a photo of a confidential document illustrates a basic security rule: sensitive information can leak through ordinary social-media habits, not only through sophisticated attacks.</description></item><item><title>Wellness scams show why health literacy must include fraud detection</title><link>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-wellness-scam-elderly-health-literacy.html</link><guid>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-wellness-scam-elderly-health-literacy.html</guid><description>A reported elderly-care scam involving fake wellness treatments shows that health literacy is not only about medical facts. It also means recognizing fear-based sales, fake experts and expensive treatments without evidence.</description></item><item><title>A SpaceX financing story is also a lesson in founder-premium risk</title><link>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-spacex-ipo-governance-risk.html</link><guid>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-spacex-ipo-governance-risk.html</guid><description>Reports about a huge SpaceX valuation and debate over the “Musk premium” show how investors read more than technology. Governance, concentration of influence and key-person risk can become part of a company’s price.</description></item><item><title>South Korea’s comeback win shows how football momentum changes after one adjustment</title><link>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-korea-czech-world-cup-comeback.html</link><guid>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-korea-czech-world-cup-comeback.html</guid><description>A reported 2–1 comeback by South Korea over Czechia in a World Cup opener is a useful sports lesson: matches often turn when tactical pressure, substitutions and emotional timing align.</description></item><item><title>A one-page admission letter debate asks what universities should signal</title><link>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-admission-letter-one-page-education-cost.html</link><guid>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-admission-letter-one-page-education-cost.html</guid><description>Reports about encouraging university admission letters to return to a simpler one-page format raise a useful education question: should enrollment communication compete on packaging, or on clarity, dignity and real student support?</description></item><item><title>Oral GLP-1 drugs show how convenience can reshape a health market</title><link>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-oral-glp1-market-health-business.html</link><guid>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-oral-glp1-market-health-business.html</guid><description>Reports about strong prescription numbers for oral GLP-1 weight-management medicine highlight a health-business lesson: delivery format can change patient adoption, competition and expectations even when the therapeutic idea is already familiar.</description></item><item><title>When e-commerce subsidy slogans meet consumer-information rules</title><link>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-ecommerce-subsidy-labels-consumer-literacy.html</link><guid>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-ecommerce-subsidy-labels-consumer-literacy.html</guid><description>Regulators reportedly questioned several e-commerce platforms over promotion labels that may sound larger or clearer than the actual discount rules. The useful lesson is that shoppers should read subsidy claims as structured information, not as a simple promise of a fixed amount.</description></item><item><title>A student-data leak case shows why school information systems need stronger boundaries</title><link>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-student-data-leak-information-literacy.html</link><guid>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-student-data-leak-information-literacy.html</guid><description>A reported case involving the sale of large volumes of student information turns a crime story into a data-literacy lesson. Schools, families and platforms all need to treat enrollment data as sensitive infrastructure rather than routine paperwork.</description></item><item><title>AI glasses in an exam room: the next test of assessment integrity</title><link>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-ai-glasses-exam-integrity.html</link><guid>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-ai-glasses-exam-integrity.html</guid><description>A report that AI-enabled glasses were used in a TOEIC cheating case in South Korea highlights a broader shift: exams now face tools that are small, networked and capable of real-time assistance. Integrity policies must move beyond banning phones alone.</description></item><item><title>Green-list majors are useful signals, not automatic career guarantees</title><link>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-green-major-list-career-planning.html</link><guid>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-green-major-list-career-planning.html</guid><description>A discussion of 2026 green-list college majors can help families think about employment demand, but rankings should not replace self-assessment. Better planning connects labor-market signals with aptitude, learning cost and long-term adaptability.</description></item><item><title>An EV leadership change is a reminder to read corporate governance signals carefully</title><link>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-zeekr-leadership-change-corporate-governance.html</link><guid>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-zeekr-leadership-change-corporate-governance.html</guid><description>A reported leadership and legal-representative change at Zeekr is not just a personnel headline. For technology companies, governance changes can signal how a group allocates attention, prepares for competition and clarifies accountability.</description></item><item><title>A sharp gold pullback is a lesson in risk signals, not just price watching</title><link>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-gold-price-pullback-risk-literacy.html</link><guid>https://www.x5h.net/articles/sohu-gold-price-pullback-risk-literacy.html</guid><description>Reports about gold falling more than 25% from a peak show why investors should separate a long-term asset story from short-term entry risk. Gold can hedge some uncertainties, but it still moves with rates, currency expectations and crowd positioning.</description></item></channel></rss>