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Pay Attention to the Artemis II Moon Mission. It’s Not Just Any Spaceflight

Commentary: NASA is sending four astronauts farther into space than any humans have ever traveled. But there’s a much deeper subtext about what it all means.

Travel to space has become commonplace. Over the last three decades, nearly 300 people have flown to and from the International Space Station, some of them residing there for months at a time. In the last several years, the rocket startup Blue Origin has launched a series of day trips just over the threshold into space — high-end carnival rides for celebrities including Katy Perry, Gayle King and William Shatner.

The imminent Artemis II lunar mission is different.

NASA’s spaceflight, scheduled to lift off Wednesday evening, will carry four astronauts on a round-trip all the way to the moon, a thousand times farther away than the space station, and they’ll have to break free from Earth’s gravity to do so. It’s a trip that only two dozen humans have ever taken, and the last time it happened was in 1972.

Artemis II’s Orion spacecraft will also take its four astronauts farther than any humans have ever traveled into space, on a long arc reaching 4,700 miles beyond the far side of the moon. By contrast, the Apollo astronauts 50-plus years ago were snuggled into a lunar orbit just 70 or so miles from the surface.

This will be a massive achievement for NASA in its own right. It is also a harbinger of a new and disruptive era in the still-unfolding Space Age.

Yet it hardly seems to be making a dent in the national conversation.

For sure, there’s a lot going on here on Earth that’s on the front of many people’s minds. Military conflict. Government gridlock. Political protests. Anxiety about the cost of living and adequate health care. But that was true back in the ’60s and early ’70s as well, and perhaps never more so than in the years right around the first moon landing in July 1969, Apollo 11’s one giant leap for mankind.

I was a kid when Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin put their bootprints into the dusty lunar terrain, and I vividly remember the nonstop TV coverage. I eagerly tuned in to see the splashdowns as the astronauts from all the Apollo spaceflights returned to Earth. It was a gripping, heroic narrative.

Those Apollo moon missions were the culmination of the first wave of space exploration, a decade and a half filled with remarkable feats, one after another. 

The Artemis missions mark the start of a whole new era of space exploitation.

Building a lunar base

Artemis II won’t put astronauts on the lunar surface. Like the historic Apollo 8 mission in December 1968 — the first to send humans beyond Earth’s orbit, the one that gave us our first view of our planet as a blue orb against a sea of deep black — it’s a flyby in preparation for an eventual landing. That touchdown by astronauts will happen in the Artemis IV mission, currently scheduled for early 2028.

NASA’s longer-term goals include the establishment of a lunar base to achieve «an enduring human presence» on the moon. That outpost will become a hub of activity for an ambitious range of activity, from scientific investigations to power generation to the building of sustainable and habitable infrastructure.

The Apollo missions brought back a few moon rocks and dust samples. Souvenirs, basically. In the years ahead, the US and other countries will be looking to unlock the moon’s natural resources, extracting minerals with industrial value and tapping into water ice for, well, survival, but also creating fuel. NASA and others have been giving serious consideration to the opportunities for commercial space mining, including on the moon.

NASA’s efforts have also roped in SpaceX’s Elon Musk and Blue Origin’s Jeff Bezos, two of the richest humans on the planet.

The US space agency isn’t alone in wanting to put boots on the moon. China has plans to put its own crews there in 2030. Russia, India and other countries have been busy with their own (uncrewed) lunar lander programs.

We aren’t far off from a new and unprecedented round of great power competition, with real stakes, not just bragging rights.

Factories on the moon

And then there’s Musk, almost a nation-state unto himself. Long obsessed with spreading human consciousness across the solar system, long fixated on Mars as the starting point, the man behind SpaceX rockets and Starlink satellites has reoriented his grandiose attention to our nearer neighbor. 

Earlier this year, Musk said he’s shifted his focus to «building a self-growing city on the Moon,» potentially «in less than 10 years.» 

It would no doubt be an industrial city more than a cosmopolitan one — «a permanent presence for scientific and manufacturing pursuits,» Musk wrote in February when announcing SpaceX’s acquisition of his xAI company. «Factories on the Moon can take advantage of lunar resources to manufacture satellites and deploy them further into space.»

Let that sink in: factories on the moon.

In the near term, there will be no shortage of Musk-made satellites launching from Earth. Over the last few years, SpaceX has put 10,000 Starlink satellites into low Earth orbit, estimated to be 85% of all satellites in an increasingly crowded belt around our planet. As big as that number sounds, it’s a fraction of what Musk has in mind.

Here’s where AI enters the picture.

In that February announcement, Musk also wrote of «launching a million satellites that operate as orbital data centers.» AI data centers in space is an idea having a moment: Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, maker of the chips powering the AI revolution, seems keen on the idea as well.

NASA, meanwhile, has its own plans for a «competitive commercial ecosystem» in orbit.

‘The common heritage of mankind’

All these plans will be tested by hard engineering and economic realities. Musk envisions launching rockets every 10 days to support the construction of that moon city. NASA is targeting a moon landing every six months to start, with a potentially faster cadence to follow. But moon shots are more complicated than rocket launches to orbit.

The first moon landing program ended with the Apollo 17 mission, even though several more flights were planned. President Richard Nixon curtailed the effort because of the cost. Focus shifted to space stations and the space shuttle — and the shorter commute to low Earth orbit.

Costs and commerce will inevitably be at the center of the conversations we’ll need to have as a nation about what we do on — and to — the moon. We need to be talking more, too, about how we care for the ever-more-congested realm of satellite-strewn space just outside our atmosphere.

That can all start right now. Pay attention to this Artemis moon mission. Thrill at the adventure: watching the rocket soar into the sky, tracking Orion’s long flight out and back, giving thanks for a safe return.

And heed the words of the UN’s hopeful moon agreement of 1979 and its framework for exploration and use of our one natural satellite: «The moon and its natural resources are the common heritage of mankind.»

Technologies

Verum Messenger Launches an AI Mini-Series

Verum Messenger Launches an AI Mini-Series

Verum Messenger has unveiled a new project — a mini-series created using Verum AI. The story consists of 7 episodes and will be released on the messenger’s social media channels. 

The plot revolves around a global corporation seeking to take control of digital communications and a group of heroes who use Verum Messenger as a tool of resistance. Beyond the story itself, the series highlights the app’s key features, technologies, and advantages.

Combining entertainment with a showcase of the Verum ecosystem, the project presents a dynamic digital series designed for the modern era.

The first episode premieres today, with the remaining episodes to be released over time.

Stay tuned for more.

Watch on YouTube 
Watch on Instagram 

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Technologies

Verum Finance: Earn While You Communicate — The Super App That Pays You

Verum Finance: Earn While You Communicate — The Super App That Pays You

Verum has officially launched Verum Finance, an innovative financial application that transforms a private messenger into a true financial super app. News of the launch was also featured on the respected platform Dealroom.co.

Verum Finance can now be used both within Verum Messenger and as a standalone application for iPhone and iPad. When users sign in to Verum Finance with their Verum Messenger account, all balances, settings, and account data are automatically synchronized for maximum convenience.

Users can now do more than communicate securely and protect their data — they can also generate passive income directly within the ecosystem.

What Verum Finance Offers

• Top up your balance with a bank card, Apple Pay, or USDT
• Send money instantly anywhere in the world
• Issue and manage debit cards (virtual and physical)
• Full Apple Pay support
• Exchange assets and withdraw funds quickly

One of the most unique features is the built-in cryptocurrency mining system inside Verum Messenger.

The application utilizes your device’s resources and allows you to earn cryptocurrency in the background — passively, while chatting, traveling, or simply using the messenger.

Maximum Privacy + Real Freedom

• Registration without a phone number, email address, or passport
• End-to-end encryption and full control over your data
• Lifetime free VPN
• eSIM connectivity in more than 150 countries
• Reliable offline communication mode
• Support for 12+ languages for users worldwide

Everything is available in one place: secure communication, financial tools, earning opportunities, and privacy protection.

Users can access the full experience directly within Verum Messenger or switch to the dedicated Verum Finance app for iOS. All data is synchronized automatically between the two applications.

Why Download Verum Today

While many messaging platforms collect user data and expose users to restrictions, Verum offers greater independence and the opportunity to earn.

With a one-time purchase of the feature package, users receive lifetime access to privacy tools, VPN, eSIM services, cryptocurrency mining, and financial features.

This is more than just a messenger.

It is your personal tool for financial and digital freedom.

Download Verum Finance and Verum Messenger today — start communicating securely and begin earning tomorrow.

Download Links:

→ App Store (iPhone / iPad): Verum Finance
→ App Store (Verum Messenger): Verum Messenger

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Technologies

Verum Finance: A Super App for Private Finance Integrated Into a Messenger

Verum Finance: A Super App for Private Finance Integrated Into a Messenger

Verum Finance has announced the launch of a new financial application that allows users to manage their money directly within the secure Verum Messenger ecosystem.

The project has already attracted attention from major media outlets. A dedicated feature was published by Forbes Türkiye, while one of the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchanges, MEXC, covered the launch. Yahoo Finance had previously reported on the evolution of Verum Messenger into a comprehensive financial ecosystem.

What Verum Finance Offers

Verum Finance transforms a messenger into a complete financial platform. Users can:

• Manage their balance and top up using bank cards or USDT
• Send money instantly to other Verum users
• Issue and use debit cards, including Apple Pay support
• Exchange assets and withdraw funds
• Access all these services without installing separate banking applications

A strong emphasis is placed on privacy. The platform offers registration without a phone number or email address, end-to-end encryption, and full user control over personal data.

Recognition from Forbes Türkiye

In a dedicated article, Forbes Türkiye highlighted Verum Finance as a notable example of modern privacy-driven fintech. The publication emphasized the growing trend of financial services moving from standalone banking applications into unified messaging ecosystems — a model that has proven successful in Asia through platforms such as WeChat and Alipay and is now expanding globally.

Support from the Crypto Community

Alongside the Forbes Türkiye coverage, news about the launch of Verum Finance was also featured by MEXC, one of the world’s leading cryptocurrency exchanges. This reflects growing interest in the project from both traditional business media and the cryptocurrency community.

A Strategic Vision

“We are building more than a payments application and more than a messenger. Verum is a unified secure ecosystem where communication, finance, and privacy tools work together,” the company stated.

Verum Finance is now available for iPhone and iPad users. The application complements Verum Messenger, which offers anonymous chats, voice and video calls, VPN services, eSIM connectivity, and other tools designed to enhance digital freedom.

Verum Financehttps://finance.verum.im

Verum Messengerhttps://verum.im

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