Finnish editors opened the day with a saturated focus on the socioeconomic threats of artificial intelligence. Helsingin Sanomat repeatedly headlined a viral "scariest chart" illustrating a decoupling of corporate profits from human labor, effectively pivoting the national conversation from the previous day's document dumps to structural economic anxiety. By midday, editorial priority shifted toward maritime security and foreign interference. Outlets closely tracked the detention of a Russian vessel in Swedish waters, with experts highlighting potential links to North Korean munitions smuggling. This was accompanied by investigative reports on suspicious Russian-owned properties in Finland, following up on interests previously expressed by the presidency. In the afternoon, the news cycle was dominated by a domestic literary scandal and political fallout. Major publishers withdrew works by author Harri István Mäki due to plagiarism allegations, while political reporting centered on accusations that the National Coalition Party delayed gambling legislation to avoid voter backlash. The day concluded with the capture of a 14-year-old suspect in the Helsinki stabbing and reports of former MP Ano Turtiainen’s public declaration of willingness to fight against Finland.