Wednesday, August 4, 2021

Wednesday CoronaBuzz, August 4, 2021: 51 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Wednesday CoronaBuzz, August 4, 2021: 51 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.
By ResearchBuzz

Please stay safe. Please get vaccinated. Please wear a mask when you’re inside with a bunch of people. Much love.

NEW RESOURCES – EDUCATION/ENTERTAINMENT

U.S. Department of Education: U.S. Department of Education Releases “Return to School Roadmap” to Support Students, Schools, Educators, and Communities in Preparing for the 2021-2022 School Year. “The Roadmap provides key resources and supports for students, parents, educators, and school communities to build excitement around returning to classrooms this school year and outlines how federal funding can support the safe and sustained return to in-person learning. Over the course of the next several weeks as schools reopen nationwide, the Roadmap will lay out actionable strategies to implement the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) updated guidance for K-12 schools, so that schools can minimize transmission and sustain in-person learning all school-year long.”

UPDATES

Florida Politics: Florida Hospital Association’s Mary Mayhew says new COVID-19 surge ‘dramatically different’. “The fourth wave of the COVID-19 pandemic ravaging Florida now is dramatically different in character from previous waves because the Delta variant is putting many young people into intensive care, Florida Hospital Association President Mary Mayhew said Monday. Speaking on MSNBC’s Morning Joe show, Mayhew said Florida’s hospitals, particularly in Jacksonville and Orlando, are filling fast with much younger COVID-19 patients. She called it a crisis.”

AL: ‘We are exhausted:’ Alabama hospital’s number of COVID patients triples in a month. “Earlier this month, Huntsville Hospital Health System was treating 35 COVID-19 patients. Just a few weeks later, that number more than tripled to 129 and, now, has reached 143 with 46 in the ICU and 13 on a ventilator.”

Anchorage Daily News: ‘Sicker and younger’: Unvaccinated people are driving a new hospitalization trend in Alaska’s COVID-19 wave. “Last winter, as the peak of the coronavirus pandemic ripped through the state, the infected patients seen by Dr. Nick Papacostas in his Anchorage emergency room tended to be older, in their 70s and 80s. Now the highly contagious delta variant of COVID-19 is driving up case counts around the country and in Alaska, where as of Friday barely 44% of the total population was fully vaccinated. And now Papacostas is seeing people in their 40s, 50s and 60s with more serious respiratory problems, who need additional oxygen or even mechanical ventilation, he said. None are vaccinated.”

Salt Lake Tribune: 15 Utahns die of COVID-19 over the weekend. “Utah’s COVID-19 death toll continues to rise as the state reported 15 more fatalities over the weekend. The state health department is no longer reporting numbers on the weekends and released three days of numbers on Monday. The state saw more than 2,200 new cases of the coronavirus on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. The seven-day average for new cases is now 861, the most since Feb. 15.”

Tampa Bay Times: Florida leads the nation in kids hospitalized for COVID. “Florida had 32 pediatric COVID-19 hospitalizations per day between July 24 and 30, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Adjusted for population, that’s 0.76 kids hospitalized per 100,000 residents, the highest rate in the country. The Florida Department of Health reported 10,785 new COVID-19 infections among children under 12 between July 23 and 29. That’s an average of 1,540 new cases per day.”

Houston Chronicle: ‘Dark times’: Houston’s fourth COVID-19 wave to be the largest yet, medical leaders predict. “In the Houston area, the previous record for COVID hospitalizations was 2,927 people on Jan. 8. The consortium’s latest model predicts that record will be broken Aug. 8. The previous record for ICU patients — 947, set July 18, 2020 — is predicted to be broken Aug. 15. Even more alarmingly, the surge isn’t predicted to level off there, but to keep climbing sharply. By the end of August, the consortium forecasts that roughly 2,000 people will be in Houston ICUs — double the previous high.”

New York Times: Florida may face its worst wave ever as the Delta variant spreads.. “As the highly contagious Delta variant of the virus rips through the unvaccinated population in the United States, Florida is heading toward its worst outbreak since the start of the pandemic. The state is still about one month away from its peak, according to an epidemiologist who has been tracking the virus’s reach there.”

CBS Los Angeles: LA County COVID-19 Hospitalizations Nearly Quadruple In One Month. “Five deaths and 2,361 new cases of COVID-19 were reported by Los Angeles County Monday, and the number of people hospitalized with the virus has nearly quadrupled in the last month. The new infections brought the county’s total from throughout the pandemic to 1,305,704. The additional five deaths raised the county’s death toll of 24,690.”

MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

CNN: Top RNC official in Florida spreads Covid-19 conspiracies, calling vaccines the ‘mark of the beast’. “Amid recent surging coronavirus cases in Florida, a top Republican National Committee official in the state has spread anti-vaccine rhetoric and misinformation, comparing the Biden administration’s vaccine efforts to Nazi-era “brown shirts,” and twice calling the vaccines “the mark of the beast,” comparable to a ‘false god.'”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

Washington Post: Vaccinated people are ready for normalcy — and angry at the unvaccinated getting in their way. “An unwelcome resurgence of the coronavirus has caused a groundswell of impatience, frustration and even rage from Americans who got their shots months ago toward those whose resistance won’t budge. States are reimplementing mask requirements, corporations are delaying their returns to the office and support is building for more coercive ways to tamp down the virus’s spread, including vaccine mandates.”

BBC: Covid third wave: Americans ‘scared and angry’ as pandemic worsens. “The country’s vaccination rate was once the envy of the world and restrictions were lifted in the spring, well ahead of many other nations. But now, with only half of the population vaccinated and the Delta variant surging, the summer of freedom feels like it’s coming to a premature end.”

CNN: Local reporters in Covid hot spots push to break through to the unvaccinated. “As the Delta variant continues to spread, particularly among the unvaccinated, local reporters in Covid-19 hot spots are struggling to get through to vaccine resisters.”

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

ABC News: Nursing home advocates shift stance on mandatory COVID-19 vaccinations for staff. “As the delta variant continues to drive the latest coronavirus surge, many long-term care providers and advocates are calling for mandatory vaccinations for staff members — a stark change in tone from earlier in the pandemic.”

NBC News: Officials set up a mobile center at a Missouri fair to boost vaccinations. No one showed up.. “Officials at the St. Charles County Health Department in Missouri said they were disappointed after no one showed up to a mobile Covid-19 vaccination center offering vaccines to those attending a local annual fair this week.”

Daily Beast: State TV: Russians Are Using Prosthetic Arms to Dodge COVID Jabs. “Kremlin-controlled media is deep in a massive vaccine disinfo campaign, and has been ever since COVID jabs were first introduced. The goal, from the beginning, was simple: to undermine foreign-made inoculations, and promote Russia’s COVID jabs as the very best. But now, it seems that the fearmongering is backfiring and impeding the Kremlin’s push to vaccinate its own people.”

AP: Florida breaks record for COVID-19 hospitalizations . ” A day after it recorded the most new daily cases since the start of the pandemic, Florida on Sunday broke a previous record for current hospitalizations set more than a year ago before vaccines were available. The Sunshine State had 10,207 people hospitalized with confirmed COVID-19 cases, according to data reported to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services.”

HuffPost: I’m An ICU Doctor And I Cannot Believe The Things Unvaccinated Patients Are Telling Me. “Then, effective vaccines became widely available in the U.S. — I briefly saw light at the end of the tunnel. The number of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs across the country plummeted. It looked like our sacrifices and commitment as health care workers had paid off. We believed herd immunity could become a reality and we could return to some sense of normalcy. But the relief was short-lived, the hope was fleeting, and we are amid another surge. A surge that is fueled by a highly transmissible variant and those unvaccinated. My experiences in the ICU these past weeks have left me surprised, disheartened, but most of all, angry.”

ABC 33: Alabama pharmacists, clinics see increased demand for COVID-19 vaccines. “Just 34 percent of Alabama’s population is fully vaccinated, which is lowest in the nation. However, demand for vaccines is increasing and that’s encouraging for health leaders.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

The Verge: Facebook is requiring all US employees to wear masks in offices. “Facebook announced on Monday that all employees will be required to wear masks when offices reopen. The policy goes into effect on August 3rd and will remain in place until further notice. The company confirmed last week that it’s requiring COVID-19 vaccination for all employees returning to work at its US campuses, which it plans to fully reopen by October.”

ABC 7: ‘More assertive’: Kaiser Permanente, others announce COVID-19 vaccine requirements. “There is a growing list of companies demanding proof of vaccination. On Monday, Kaiser Permanente announced how it plans to take protection a step further. It will now require all employees and physicians to be vaccinated against the COVID-19 virus, and the more transmissible, more infectious Delta variant.”

NBC News: Tyson Foods to mandate vaccine for all frontline workers and corporate employees. “Meatpacker Tyson Foods announced Tuesday that it would require its U.S. employees to be vaccinated fully this year. The company said 56,000 U.S. employees, representing less than half of its domestic workforce, has been vaccinated so far. Office workers face a deadline of Oct. 1 to be vaccinated fully, while plant employees have until Nov. 1.”

WORLD / FEDERAL GOVERNMENT

New York Times: Where a Vast Global Vaccination Program Went Wrong. “After months of struggle, the U.N.-backed Covax alliance will soon have many more doses, promising relief for vaccine shortages in poorer countries. But it faces a deepening crisis: difficulties getting shots into arms as the Delta variant spreads.”

Washington Post: New restrictions sweep China as officials race to contain delta outbreak. “Faced with a rapidly spreading coronavirus outbreak, China is implementing a wave of travel restrictions and quarantine orders, the scale of which has not been seen since the country’s initial explosion of cases from Wuhan in 2020. Driven by the contagious delta variant, the outbreak will be a closely watched test of China’s vaccines as well as its draconian containment strategy, which until this point has been largely effective in keeping infections low, experts say.”

New York Times: To Fight Vaccine Lies, Authorities Recruit an ‘Influencer Army’. “Fewer than half of all Americans age 18 to 39 are fully vaccinated, compared with more than two-thirds of those over 50, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. And about 58 percent of those age 12 through 17 have yet to receive a shot at all. To reach these young people, the White House has enlisted an eclectic army of more than 50 Twitch streamers, YouTubers, TikTokers and the 18-year-old pop star Olivia Rodrigo, all of them with enormous online audiences.”

The Guardian: China shuts down transport routes as it battles worst Covid outbreak in months. “The latest outbreak has so far infected more than 400 people in 25 cities, including the capital city, Beijing, and in Wuhan for the first time since it contained the first Covid-19 outbreak last year. Cases have been reported in 17 of the 31 provinces.”

NBC News: Biden to announce U.S. has delivered more than 100 million Covid shots abroad. “President Joe Biden will announce Tuesday that his administration has delivered more than 100 million Covid vaccine doses abroad — more than the donations of all other countries combined, the White House said.”

New York Times: Germany Will Offer Vaccine Booster Shots Starting in September. “As concerns grow over the highly contagious Delta variant of the coronavirus, Germany on Monday became the biggest Western country yet to announce that it will offer vaccine booster shots to a wide range of people considered potentially vulnerable, adding to growing momentum in rich nations to give additional shots to fully vaccinated people.”

The Scotsman: Covid Scotland: Social distancing removed but face masks and home working to remain as Level 0 ends on Monday. “Social distancing requirements will end in most settings, limits on outdoor gatherings will be lifted, and venues such as nightclubs can open. However, the legal requirement to wear face coverings will remain ‘for some time to come, including for older children in schools.”

STATE GOVERNMENT

Orlando Sentinel: As eviction ban expires, Florida has distributed only 2% of funds to help renters. “Florida has distributed only 2% of the $870 million in federal funds it has received so far to keep renters in their homes during the pandemic by paying their landlords, even though a nationwide eviction moratorium ended on Sunday. Housing advocates fear the end of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention moratorium could result in hundreds of thousands of Florida renters being evicted in the coming weeks, forcing some to become homeless just as the highly contagious delta variant of the coronavirus is rapidly spreading.”

The Advocate: Gov. John Bel Edwards reissues indoor mask mandate for Louisiana. See what’s covered.. “As confirmed COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations continue to surge in Louisiana, Gov. John Bel Edwards reinstituted an indoor mask mandate on Monday requiring residents to wear face coverings in schools, churches, businesses and any other public spaces.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

WABC: Coronavirus Update NYC: City issues ‘strong recommendation,’ stops short of mask mandate. “For the first time, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio recommended Monday vaccinated people wear a mask in crowded indoor settings, but he stopped short of making the new CDC masking guidance mandatory in the city.”

Raleigh, North Carolina: Face Coverings Required in City of Raleigh Facilities Beginning Aug. 2. “As the City of Raleigh continues its safe return to the workplace and to reflect recommendations from the State of North Carolina and the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), face coverings will be required inside city buildings beginning Monday, Aug. 2.”

CNN: Attendee at St. Louis County Council vote to overturn mask mandate tests positive for Covid-19. “A person who attended a St. Louis County Council meeting last week where officials voted to overturn a mask mandate has tested positive for Covid-19, officials said Saturday.”

New York Times: N.Y.C. will require workers and customers show proof of at least one dose for indoor dining and other activities.. “New York City will become the first U.S. city to require proof of at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine for a variety of activities for workers and customers — indoor dining, gyms and performances — to put pressure on people to get vaccinated, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Tuesday morning.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

BBC: Barbie of Oxford Covid vaccine designer Dame Sarah Gilbert created. “Barbie maker Mattel has created a doll of the scientist who designed the Oxford coronavirus vaccine, Prof Dame Sarah Gilbert. Dame Sarah said she found the creation ‘very strange’ at first – but she hoped it would inspire children.”

ABC News: Fauci warns ‘things are going to get worse’ with COVID. “As the country grapples with a surge in the delta variant of the COVID-19 coronavirus, Dr. Anthony Fauci believes that lockdowns the country saw last year are likely to not return, though he warned ‘things will get worse’ during an interview on ABC’s ‘This Week.'”

WABC: Texas couple who didn’t trust vaccine change minds after ending up in ICU with COVID-19. “A husband and wife who didn’t trust the COVID-19 vaccine changed their minds when they ended up in the ICU. By that point it was too late for vaccination – and now they are begging relatives to make sure their children get their shots. Lydia Rodriguez and her husband Lawrence, of La Marque, Texas, were both admitted to the hospital nearly three weeks ago with the virus, family members say.”

WLWT: Woman urges people to get vaccinated after losing her brother, dad to COVID-19 in same week. “Payten McCall, 24, and her family were afraid to get vaccinated, but now she’s urging people not to make that mistake after losing her oldest brother and her dad to COVID-19. Her dad, Mark McCall, 60, died early Friday morning in the Covid ward of a Jacksonville, Florida, hospital where her mom, Sherry McCall, 58, was also being treated for the virus. The family was already reeling after her brother, Britt McCall, 35, died on Monday.”

Heavy Consequence: The Offspring Oust Drummer Pete Parada for Choosing Not to Get COVID Vaccine. “The Offspring have apparently parted ways with drummer Pete Parada. According to the stickman, it’s because he has chosen not to get vaccinated against COVID-19 due to medical reasons.”

NBC News: Virginia Covid patient goes from ‘invincible’ to hospital-bed vaccine advocate. “An unvaccinated Virginia man who’s been hospitalized with Covid-19 is using social media to urge others to go out and get the shot. Travis Campbell, 43, has been in the hospital for more than a week with complications from the virus, which also infected his wife and two of their children.”

SPORTS

Washington Post: The NFL should lead by example and require its players to be vaccinated. “If one of their own — a 6-foot-3, 240-pound former NFL linebacker, now 59 years old and made vulnerable to the ravages of covid-19 by spending part of the past year fighting off a deadly skin cancer — can’t convince the current generation of professional football players working under his tutelage to get the coronavirus vaccine to keep him, his family, themselves, their families and their co-workers and their families safer, then the company that employs them should.”

BBC: Tokyo Olympics: Greece out of artistic swimming events after positive Covid tests. “Greece have withdrawn from the Tokyo Olympics artistic swimming competitions after five members of the team tested positive for coronavirus. Seven others have been designated as close contacts.”

K-12 EDUCATION

Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Henry County Schools to pay staffers $1,000 for getting vaccinated. “Henry County school leaders say they will give $1,000 to staffers who have already been vaccinated or who plan to get shots against COVID-19 by the end of September. The district is using the incentive to get its 6,000 employees inoculated in an attempt to ‘reduce the number of interruptions and shifts in instruction and learning,’ leaders said in a press release.”

WRAL: Wake County school board votes to continue mask mandate for 2021-22 school year. “Wake County Public School System students and employees will continue to wear face coverings at school, the county Board of Education voted Tuesday. The measure approved on a 9-0 vote requires face coverings in all indoor pre-kindergarten through 12th grade school environments, including sports, band and other extracurricular activities.”

HEALTH

BBC: Why bonding over the Euros appeared to increase Covid cases in men. “The Euros were good news for England fans (until the final) but not such good news for coronavirus infections (they went up). In Scotland too, the rise and fall in Covid cases mirrored the country’s footballing fortunes So what does this tell us about how football supporters behave, and why is it typically men who cleave to this kind of group conduct?”

TECHNOLOGY

New York Times: ‘X’ Marks the Spot: Officials Map a Route Out of the Pandemic. “Governments and organizations around the world are using geospatial data and digital mapping tools to guide their vaccination campaigns.”

CRIME / SECURITY / LEGAL

Local 10: Landlords, tenants fill courts as eviction moratorium ends. “Historic amounts of rental assistance allocated by Congress had been expected to avert a crisis. But the distribution has been painfully slow: Only about $3 billion of the first tranche of $25 billion had been distributed through June by states and localities. A second amount of $21.5 billion will go to the states. More than 15 million people live in households that owe as much as $20 billion to their landlords, according to the Aspen Institute. As of July 5, roughly 3.6 million people in the U.S. said they faced eviction in the next two months, according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey.”

KTVO: Iowa Department of Public Health sued over request for Test Iowa records. “A Utah-based attorney is suing the Iowa Department of Public Health and its spokesperson, Sarah Ekstrand, over failing to provide records on the state’s COVID-19 testing program, court records show.”

OPINION

Cap Times: Plain Talk: Thanks, anti-vaxxers, for my breakthrough COVID case. “What angers me is that we could be well beyond this seemingly endless crisis if as a nation we would have pulled together and put an end to this awful crisis by using the tools that are available to us. Instead, a smug cadre of charlatan politicians, think tanks that conclude our ‘constitutional rights’ to get sick and infect our families and neighbors are somehow paramount, and just plain American stupid stubbornness has allowed a variant like the delta to emerge and once again create havoc.”

CNN: The really worrisome thing about the Delta variant. “Here’s the real news: there is growing evidence that — for whatever reason (higher viral loads, something different about how the virus is handled by less mature immune systems, or something else), children infected by the Delta variant may develop a more severe form of the disease compared to illness caused by other forms of the virus.”

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August 4, 2021 at 06:46PM
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Speculative Annotation, Tiananmen Square Museum, Black Trans Femme Artists, More: Wednesday ResearchBuzz, August 4, 2021

Speculative Annotation, Tiananmen Square Museum, Black Trans Femme Artists, More: Wednesday ResearchBuzz, August 4, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Library of Congress: Speculative Annotation Invites Public to Interact with Digitized Collections at the Library of Congress. “Created by artist and 2021 Innovator in Residence Courtney McClellan, Speculative Annotation is an open-source dynamic web application and public art project. The app presents a unique mini collection of free-to-use items from the Library for students, teachers and learners to annotate through captions, drawings and other types of mark-making. As a special feature for Speculative Annotation users, the app includes a collection of informative, engaging annotations from Library experts and resources on the Library’s website.”

South China Morning Post: Virtual Tiananmen Square museum crowdfunded by Hong Kong vigil organiser launches. “The online museum offers a timeline of the 1989 student-led pro-democracy movement in Beijing, including the subsequent crackdown and its aftermath. It also provides a list of those killed, injured and forced to go into exile. The website dedicates a chapter to Hong Kong’s role in backing the student movement and later commemorating the crackdown over the past three decades.” The museum is currently in Chinese only, but more languages are expected.

Bob FM: Fashion Nova’s Huge Contribution To Support Black Trans Femme Artists. “Black Trans Femme Artists (BTFA) collective, a community-based organization, revolves around art production and preservation by Black trans nonbinary femmes and Black trans women. It provides them the support and resources they need to thrive. This organization received donations to the tune of $25,000 from Fashion Nova’s Women on Top.” According to this article, a database of Black Trans Femme artists around the world will soon be launched by this organization.

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Engadget: Facebook disables accounts of NYU team looking into political ad targeting. “Before the US election last year, a team of researchers from New York University’s engineering school launched a project to gather more data on political ads. In particular, the team wanted to know how political advertisers choose the demographic their ads target and don’t target. Shortly after the project called the NYU Ad Observatory went live, however, Facebook notified the researchers that their efforts violate its terms of service related to bulk data collection. Now, the social network has announced that it has ‘disabled the accounts, apps, Pages and platform access associated with NYU’s Ad Observatory Project and its operators…'”

BBC: WhatsApp ‘view once’ brings disappearing photos and videos. “WhatsApp is rolling out a feature that allows users to have photos or videos vanish after they are seen. After the recipient opens the image for the first time, ‘view once’ deletes it, without saving it to a phone.”

CNET: How to use Apple’s Hide My Email feature to kick spammers out of your inbox. “Some spam is sent with malicious intent, but a lot of it boils down to harmless email clogging up your inbox, creating a cacophony of advertisements you don’t want to see, and plenty of time-consuming work to delete or unsubscribe. Apple is taking aim at email spam with a new tool called Hide My Email, which aims to thin out your inbox by keeping email spam from showing up in the first place.? Note that this is a premium service, not free.

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

New York Times: Iraq Reclaims 17,000 Looted Artifacts, Its Biggest-Ever Repatriation. “When the Iraqi prime minister’s plane touched down in Baghdad last week after an official visit to the United States, its cargo included 17,000 archaeological artifacts returned by a prominent museum and an Ivy League university in the largest-ever repatriation of looted Iraqi antiquities.”

ZDNet: He thought iPhone users were stupid. Then his Google Pixel stopped working. “It’s long been an issue with Google that many of its phones are excellent, but much of what surrounds them — the marketing and the customer service — are slightly less than excellent, drifting toward the really not very good. You’d think the company would fully commit, one way or the other. Yet it’s constantly seemed to resist, preferring to hang in slow, suspended animation.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

BNN Bloomberg: Google Accused in Suit of Fixing Ad Rates With a Facebook Deal. “Alphabet Inc.’s Google was accused in an antitrust lawsuit of giving itself the edge in online advertising by cutting a cozy deal with Facebook that gives the social network an advantage in virtual auctions which determine whose ads appear where.”

Wired: France Cracked Down on Google’s Ad Tech. What’s Next?. “In a single judgement, the regulator, known as the Autorité de la Concurrence in French, managed to reshape how Google’s advertising technology works. The ruling revolves around technologies within Google’s Ad Manager—a platform that helps companies buy and sell the ads that are shown on billions of web pages.”

The Register: Australian court rules an AI can be considered an inventor on patent filings. “In a case brought by Stephen Thaler, who has filed and lost similar cases in other jurisdictions, Australia’s Federal Court last month heard and decided that the nation’s Commissioner of Patents erred when deciding that an AI can’t be considered an inventor.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Sydney Morning Herald: The Olympics have convinced me to ditch social media for good. “The penny dropped last Thursday afternoon as Jess Fox won gold in the women’s C1 canoe slalom. If you were watching on Seven, you were crying with her, equally happy and relieved because of the sadness of what happened two days earlier in the K1. If you were scrolling through Twitter, the sentiment was far different. Here, in the cesspool of anonymous public opinion, much of the talk was about her father, Richard, who had called the event off a TV in a small room in Melbourne.”

Irish Times: Era of self-regulation by social media giants must end. “There is much that is good about social media – it can keep us informed, connected with friends, share ideas and crowdfund. It is transforming how we interact, mostly in a positive way. However, listening to evidence presented before the committee, as well as having heard so many stories privately and in the media about online abuse, anonymous trolling and algorithmic bias, it is clear that the era of self-regulation by the tech companies has to end.” Good morning, Internet…

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August 4, 2021 at 05:53PM
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Tuesday, August 3, 2021

Eastman Johnson, Citizen, Good Posture, More: Tuesday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 3, 2021

Eastman Johnson, Citizen, Good Posture, More: Tuesday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 3, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

National Academy of Design: The National Academy Of Design Announces The Launch Of The Eastman Johnson Catalogue Raisonné, Directed By Dr. Patricia Hills. “The National Academy of Design is pleased to announce the launch of the virtual Eastman Johnson Catalogue Raisonné on July 29, in recognition of the anniversary of the artist’s birthday. In this first phase, the catalogue raisonné is focused on American artist Eastman Johnson’s paintings. Subsequent phases will include the artist’s drawings and prints.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Mashable: Citizen app launches paid service to monitor you through your phone. “The Citizen Protect service is designed to provide customers with a live, human safety expert on-demand. The company is promoting this as a way to have ‘peace of mind when you’re alone’ or a way to call for help in situations where a customer would not or could not call 911.”

USEFUL STUFF

KnowTechie: This app uses your webcam to help correct your posture by monitoring if you slouch. “Sitting down for long periods of time can be pretty bad for your back. Luckily, there’s a desktop app that makes sure you’re posture stays correct while you are sitting down at your computer. Zen is an all-new app that uses your computer’s camera to help keep you in check during long hours in front of your computer screen.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Tubefilter: The Programming Strategies That Shape The World’s Biggest YouTube Channels. “For 14 or so years, I have been making a living building some of the largest audiences on the YouTube platform. I’ve seen a lot of videos and channels. What I always find the most interesting, though, is that even after all of the time I’ve spent, all of the videos I’ve watched, all of the papers I’ve written here on Tubefilter, all of the conversations I’ve had with other strategists, all of the data analyses and spreadsheets and reports that I’ve presented–there are still new things to discover, analyze, dissect, and share.”

The Verge: K-Pop’s Fandom Platforms Are Changing What It Means To Be An Idol. “Parasocial relationships — a largely one-sided relationship between a fan and a public figure they feel close to due to social media — are everywhere online. And the companies behind some of the biggest acts in K-pop are pioneering a new way to monetize them. They’ve developed online platforms to help K-pop fans feel as though they have direct access to their idol favorites. That access helps shape the way these fans interact with the idol as a form of friendship and how they engage with other fans.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

New York Times: You Anon. “After a decade in which online identity came under increasingly centralized control, in which various digital and offline identities were mingled, and during which personal data became a hot global commodity, control over one’s identity is starting to look more like a threatened privilege than a right. To exist online is to be constantly asked to show yourself.”

The Register: Russia tells UN it wants vast expansion of cybercrime offenses, plus network backdoors, online censorship. “Russia has put forward a draft convention to the United Nations ostensibly to fight cyber-crime. The proposal, titled ‘United Nations Convention on Countering the Use of Information and Communications Technologies for Criminal Purposes,’ [PDF] calls for member states to develop domestic laws to punish a far broader set of offenses than current international rules recognize.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

South Florida Sun-Sentinel: Florida’s new social media censorship law is an insult to American values | Opinion. “Gov. DeSantis and other bill supporters frame the law as necessary to protect consumers from arbitrary and unfair discrimination on social media platforms. But everybody knows the real purpose of this law is to retaliate against certain technology companies because of political disagreement with their content moderation decisions.”

New York Times Magazine: The Best Way to Respond to Text Messages . “Though I have my own deep well of need tethered to every joke I attempt, it still makes me anxious when people use ‘LOL’ too generously. Its motive feels questionable, like transactional flattery. When someone sends more than one ‘LOL’ in a text thread, I can’t help thinking this person is about to ask me for a ride to the airport.”

StateTech Magazine: Philadelphia Launches AR Challenge to Improve Navigation of Public Transit. “In late June, the city, one of StateTech’s smart cities to watch, announced a new challenge through its SmartCityPHL program, dubbed ‘SEPTA for All: Augmenting Transit with Augmented Reality.’ The challenge, which just closed to new applications, asks innovators to present their best ideas for increasing accessibility with augmented reality technology.” Good evening, Internet…

Do you like ResearchBuzz? Does it help you out? Please consider supporting it on Patreon. Not interested in commitment? Perhaps you’d buy me an iced tea. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you. Feel free to comment on the blog, or @ResearchBuzz on Twitter. Thanks!



August 4, 2021 at 06:29AM
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Coral Restoration, Simone Biles, Google, More: Tuesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 3, 2021

Coral Restoration, Simone Biles, Google, More: Tuesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 3, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Coral Restoration Foundation: CRF™ Launches A Revolutionary New Tool For The Coral Restoration Community. “Coral Restoration Foundation™ (CRF™) has published the world’s first integrated database for coral restoration and research data sets, solving several critical issues for restoration managers, practitioners, and researchers.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Women Love Tech: Simone Biles Is The First Olympian With A Personal Emoji! . “The Olympics never disappoints when it comes to keeping us on the end of our seat. But this time, we’re not talking about what’s happening on the track, but off it. Simone Biles has made history by becoming the first Olympian to be given her own emoji.”

TechCrunch: Google gives the world its first official glimpse of the Pixel 6. “While the company isn’t revealing everything about it just yet, this morning Google gave the world its first official peek at its next flagship phone: the Pixel 6.”

USEFUL STUFF

New York Times: What You Can Do Today to Revitalize Your Productivity. “Whether you’ve been feeling less productive for a while or are just going through the common ‘afternoon slump,’ try using these prompts to give yourself a boost. For a full refresh, I highly recommend devoting an entire day to working through these steps, revamping your workspace and your work system.” Usually articles with titles like this are bromide-filled crapfests, let’s be real, but this is of a much higher caliber. Good suggestions.

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Mashable: Want to learn and share more about local Black history? Start with Google Maps.. “April Hamm knows Google Maps is more than just a tool to navigate from point A to B. She’s harnessed the power of the app to teach people about Black history in her current city of New Orleans. Though she grew up in a small town in Georgia, Hamm spent a lot of time visiting New Orleans as a kid. Since 2017, Hamm’s been a Google Maps Local Guide for her adopted city.”

GQ: Gen Z Are “Puriteens,” But Not For The Reasons You Think. “While generalizing about tens of millions of people is always difficult, a series of studies in recent years have reported that teens since the tail end of the millennial generation trend towards being less sexually active; they launch their sex lives later and have fewer sex partners than earlier generations. Gen Zers themselves—defined as those currently aged between 6 and 24—are aware of how they’re perceived.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

NBC News: A D for NASA, a C for HUD: Senate report warns agencies unprepared for cyberattacks. “A number of federal agencies are woefully unprepared for cyberattacks, while others ‘have not met the basic cybersecurity standards necessary to protect America’s sensitive data,’ according to a report released Tuesday by the Senate committee overseeing homeland security.”

Bleeping Computer: BlackMatter ransomware gang rises from the ashes of DarkSide, REvil. “A new ransomware gang named BlackMatter is purchasing access to corporate networks while claiming to include the best features from the notorious and now-defunct REvil and DarkSide operations.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

The Conversation: Instagram’s privacy updates for kids are positive. But plans for an under-13s app means profits still take precedence. “Facebook recently announced significant changes to Instagram for users aged under 16. New accounts will be private by default, and advertisers will be limited in how they can reach young people. The new changes are long overdue and welcome. But Facebook’s commitment to childrens’ safety is still in question as it continues to develop a separate version of Instagram for kids aged under 13.”

CNET: Intel expands AI career education program to 18 community colleges. “The AI for Workforce Program offers students courses on data collection, computer vision, AI model training, coding, the societal impacts and ethics of AI technology. Students who complete the program will be awarded a certificate or associate degree in artificial intelligence.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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August 4, 2021 at 02:23AM
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Early Wyoming Photography, Congressional Stock Trading, Twitter, More: Tuesday ResearchBuzz, August 3, 2021

Early Wyoming Photography, Congressional Stock Trading, Twitter, More: Tuesday ResearchBuzz, August 3, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

New-to-me from New Yorker, discovered via Kottke: A Woman’s Intimate Record of Wyoming in the Early Twentieth Century. “Between 1899 and her death, in 1962, [Lora Webb] Nichols created and collected some twenty-four thousand negatives documenting life in her small Wyoming town, whose fortunes boomed and then busted along with the region’s copper mines. What Nichols left behind might be the largest photographic record of this era and region in existence: thousands of portraits, still-lifes, domestic interiors, and landscapes, all made with an unfussy, straightforward, often humorous eye toward the small textures and gestures of everyday life.” The best word for this photography is “charming.” Absolutely unfussy but so full of detail and life.

Markets Insider: Want to win big like Nancy Pelosi’s husband? A new website tracks what politicians and their families are trading. “Legislators have to report what securities they buy and sell, thanks to the 2012 Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge Act – known as the STOCK Act. German company 2iQ’s Capitol Trades service, launched Monday, has brought together all of those filings in an enormous, free database that lets users see what politicians are trading and filter by asset class.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

CNET: Twitter now supports Apple and Google sign-in options. “Twitter has added the ability to sign in to the app with your Google account or Apple ID. Signing in with your Google account will work on the Twitter app or on the web, according to Twitter Support on Monday. For now, if you want to use your Apple ID, it’ll only work on the app, according to the tweet.”

Google Blog: Cheer on the finalists of our Indie Games Festival. “On September 4, we’re celebrating some of the best indie talent on Google Play during the Indie Games Festival finals for Europe, Japan and South Korea. This year the three festivals are virtual, so you can join us to discover the games, meet the developers who created them, cheer them on and be the first to hear who the winners are.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Washington Post: How the long-dead public-television painter Bob Ross became a streaming phenomenon (and kicked up plenty of dirt in the process). “Netflix has its towering complex in Hollywood. Disney Plus has its famed Burbank, Calif., lot. But it may be an anonymous office park in Herndon, Va. — next door to a used-computer store just four miles from Dulles Airport — where some of the most cutting-edge streaming work is being shaped. The space houses the roughly dozen employees of Bob Ross Inc., which controls its namesake’s likeness and steers its future, fielding the numerous licensing suitors who blow up its suburban phone lines. Run by a little-known family-business executive named Joan Kowalski, the firm has turned a public-television painter who died 26 years ago into a supremely unlikely hero of the digital video age.”

Berkeley News: Berkeley Talks: Roger McNamee on his quest to stop Facebook. “In episode 120 of Berkeley Talks, longtime venture capitalist Roger McNamee discusses how he, an early investor in Facebook and former adviser to Mark Zuckerberg, came to realize the damage caused by the social media giant and others like it, and how he’s committed to try to stop them.” This is a one-hour video, but I spot-checked it and it appears to be completely captioned.

Wired: Phantom Warships Are Courting Chaos in Conflict Zones. “According to analysis conducted by conservation technology nonprofit SkyTruth and Global Fishing Watch, over 100 warships from at least 14 European countries, Russia, and the US appear to have had their locations faked, sometimes for days at a time, since August 2020. Some of these tracks show the warships approaching foreign naval bases or intruding into disputed waters, activities that could escalate tension in hot spots like the Black Sea and the Baltic. Only a few of these fake tracks have previously been reported, and all share characteristics that suggest a common perpetrator.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

TechCrunch: Amazon will pay you $10 in credit for your palm print biometrics. “The retail and cloud giant says its palm scanning hardware ‘captures the minute characteristics of your palm — both surface-area details like lines and ridges as well as subcutaneous features such as vein patterns — to create your palm signature,’ which is then stored in the cloud and used to confirm your identity when you’re in one of its stores.”

USA Today: Biden wants more transparency for police disciplinary records. Experts say it’s harder than it sounds.. “The George Floyd Justice Policing Act of 2021, introduced originally in 2020, would create a federal registry of police misconduct complaints and disciplinary actions. The bill passed through the House on mostly party lines in early March but has met gridlock in Senate. But the move to make the records public is more difficult than it seems, experts say. Here’s why.”

BBC: Zoom settles US class action privacy lawsuit for $86m. “Video-conferencing firm Zoom has agreed to pay $86m (£61.9m) to settle a class action privacy lawsuit in the US. The lawsuit alleged that Zoom had invaded the privacy of millions of users by sharing personal data with Facebook, Google and LinkedIn.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Columbia Climate School: New York City’s Hidden Old-Growth Forests. “Historic preservation has never been New York’s strong point; about 1,000 old buildings are demolished or gut-renovated every year, the remains mostly going to landfills. Now, a team from the Tree Ring Laboratory at Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory is harnessing the destruction to systematically mine torn-out timbers for data. Annual growth rings from trees that were young in the 1500s may offer records of past climate no longer available from living trees. Studies of timber species, ages and provenances can shed light on the history of U.S. logging, commerce and transport.”

Boing Boing: How dumb Social Media rules punished me for a Lovecraftian parody of Billy Joel. “I realize that this is standard practice for this kind of intellectual property dispute: the social media company relies on overly-aggressive algorithms and always errs on the side of the powerful corporate complaint and removes the content until it’s proven innocent. It’s … not a great system.” Good morning, Internet…

Do you like ResearchBuzz? Does it help you out? Please consider supporting it on Patreon. Not interested in commitment? Perhaps you’d buy me an iced tea. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you. Feel free to comment on the blog, or @ResearchBuzz on Twitter. Thanks!



August 3, 2021 at 06:36PM
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Monday, August 2, 2021

Research-Related Documentaries, Mapping Yiddishland, 2020 Census, More: Monday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 2, 2021

Research-Related Documentaries, Mapping Yiddishland, 2020 Census, More: Monday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 2, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

ResearchBuzz reader Hashem ElAssad sent me a link to his list of Research-Related Documentaries. There are about two dozen documentaries listed here under a variety of categories, including “Data and Information,” “AI,” and “Search and Search Engines.” Some of the documentaries are on CuriosityStream, but there’s also plenty of YouTube content if you’re looking for content without paywalls.

From Jonah Lubin at the University of Chicago: Mapping Yiddishland. “This is a map is made from the bibliographic data of the ca. 13,000 texts in the Yiddish Book Center’s digital collection. Click the slider and use arrow keys or type to choose a year and see where in the world Yiddish literature was being published then. For more information, see the bibliography, which is sorted by location.”

EVENTS

BusinessWire: Census Bureau to Host Informational Webinar in Advance of 2020 Census Redistricting Data Release (PRESS RELEASE). “The Census Bureau will host a webinar ahead of the release of the 2020 Census P.L. 94-171 Redistricting Data. Information in the webinar will include instructions on how to access redistricting data, information on improvements to the race and ethnicity questions design, processing, and coding; along with a presentation on how the Census Bureau is measuring diversity in the United States.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Washington Post: Human rights activist and close ally of detained Dubai princess had phone hacked by NSO spyware, forensic test finds. “A phone belonging to a prominent supporter of two princesses who fled Dubai was infected with Pegasus spyware last year, a new forensic examination shows, offering more evidence that government clients of the Israeli surveillance giant NSO Group have used its phone-hacking tool to target human rights activists.”

BetaNews: Windows 365 now generally available, allowing users to stream Windows 10 and Windows 11 from the cloud. “Microsoft took the wraps off its subscription-based Windows 365 last month, and today the software giant announces general availability for it. Windows 365 is a cloud-based service that lets anyone securely stream full Windows 10 or Windows 11 to their personal or corporate devices, regardless of the native operating system.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

New York Times: The App With the Unprintable Name That Wants to Give Power to Creators. “Six years ago, Lindsey Lee Lugrin, a budding social media creator and model, was given the chance to be featured in a Marc by Marc Jacobs ad campaign. She was paid $1,000. Ms. Lugrin was thrilled. But after seeing her face plastered on billboards and in ads across the internet, she realized she had undervalued herself.”

LA Weekly: The Jules Bates “Artrouble” Center Sorts Out A Legacy. “Before he died at just 27 years old in a motorcycle accident in September 1982, Bates had already achieved more legendary work than many artists make in decades. Now, his family and his alma mater have joined forces to preserve and disseminate his photo archive, as the ArtCenter College of Design gets set to open the Jules Bates ‘Artrouble’ Center this fall, for the benefit of students and the public alike.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

KnowTechie: Hackers released FIFA 21’s source code because EA didn’t seem to care about the ransom. “A little over a month ago, a group of hackers obtained the entire source code for EA’s super popular FIFA 21 video game. Now, the hackers have released the source code for free, after they failed to sell the code online and EA ignored their extortion request.”

Wired: Hospitals Still Use Pneumatic Tubes—and They Can Be Hacked. “IT’S ALL TOO common to find hackable flaws in medical devices, from mammography machines and CT scanners to pacemakers and insulin pumps. But it turns out that the potential exposure extends into the walls: Researchers have found almost a dozen vulnerabilities in a popular brand of pneumatic tube delivery system that many hospitals use to to carry and distribute vital cargo like lab samples and medicine.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Grist: Can you recycle a hard drive? Google is quietly trying to find out. “Motivated by concerns about future rare earth metal supply shortages as well as the environmental toll of rare earth mining, which casts a cloud over their green credentials, tech companies, along with partners in academia and government, are exploring whether they can mine hard drives instead. Until now, these efforts have garnered little public attention. But they may get a boost under the Biden administration, which recently flagged government data center hard drives as a promising source of the rare earth elements America needs not just for data storage devices and consumer electronics, but also for energy technologies that are key to fighting climate change.” Good evening, Internet…

Do you like ResearchBuzz? Does it help you out? Please consider supporting it on Patreon. Not interested in commitment? Perhaps you’d buy me an iced tea. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you. Feel free to comment on the blog, or @ResearchBuzz on Twitter. Thanks!



August 3, 2021 at 05:10AM
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Syrian Mosiacs, Google, YouTube, More: Monday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 2, 2021

Syrian Mosiacs, Google, YouTube, More: Monday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 2, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Ekathimerini: Valuable Syrian mosaics on show in Athens. “An online database of Syrian mosaics is also available and the aim is to use this digital archive for the publication of a single tome. It contains more than 7,500 images of 365 mosaics, a fraction of the large number of artifacts that were brought to light in years of archaeological excavations.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Search Engine Journal: Google math solver guidelines require accuracy. “Google has added several new technical and content quality guidelines to the math solver structured data help documentation over the weekend. The new guidelines list a number of requirements in order to be able to show math solver and practice problem rich results in Google Search.”

CNET: YouTube tests a cheaper ‘Premium Lite’ subscription tier. “YouTube is testing a budget-friendly version of its Premium subscription plan in Europe. The Google-owned video hosting site’s Premium Lite plan offers ad-free viewing without additional Premium perks like offline downloads and background playback, as noted on ResetEra and Reddit.”

USEFUL STUFF

PC World: Online backup: We test the best services—Carbonite, iDrive, Backblaze, Livedrive. “The good news for consumers is that all of the major online backup services we reviewed this year are exceptional products. But while all of the contenders received the same high verdict, each product has its own unique selling point, as you’ll see below. It’s a win-win for consumers, who not only can’t go wrong with any of these excellant products, but can also be exceptionally choosey. Our primary concern here is backup, but we will note other roles that a service can fulfill, such as sharing, multi-device support, or emergency-restore options.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

From The Michigan Daily, which is a paper I recently discovered and I’m enjoying a lot: UMich librarians, archivists and curators reach formal bargaining recognition . “On July 18, librarians, archivists and curators (LACs) on all three University of Michigan campuses were formally recognized as a bargaining unit within the Lecturers Employee Organization, the union of non-tenure-track faculty on all three campuses at the University. The LEO communications committee wrote that this new unit will be called LEO-GLAM, which stands for galleries, libraries, archives and museums, to reflect the heritage and environments in which most LACs work.”

Motherboard: The Truth Is Out There. But This Company Holding UFO Info Won’t Share It. “A private company holds some of Canada’s most compelling UFO data—and it has no interest in sharing it. From air traffic control towers to radar installations, Nav Canada directs thousands of flights per day. That makes the company the first line of contact when professional pilots spot UFOs in Canadian airspace, like on the morning of Oct. 21, 2005, when Nav Canada staff ‘received reports from four aircraft flight crews of a shiny silver object over Toronto.'”

SECURITY & LEGAL

NBC News: ‘I will not be silenced’: Women targeted in hack-and-leak attacks speak out about spyware. “For [Ghada] Oueiss and several other women whose phones were allegedly targeted, a key part of the harassment and intimidation is the use of private photos. While these photos may seem tame by Western standards, they are considered scandalous in conservative societies like Saudi Arabia and were seemingly used to publicly shame these women and smear their reputations.”

BetaNews: New variant of PrintNightmare exploit lets any user gain admin privileges in Windows. “The PrintNightmare vulnerability has indeed proved to be something of a nightmare for Microsoft, and it’s one that shows no signs of coming to an end. Security researchers have unearthed yet another method of exploiting the Windows print spooler vulnerability, making it possible for anyone to gain administrator privileges.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Daily Beast: How I Know Facebook Can’t Fix the Problems It Profits From. “One would think this urgent global crisis would inspire Facebook, which now has over 2 billion users, global influence, and ownership of Instagram and Whatsapp, to use its immense financial and human resources to proactively and aggressively remove anti-vaccination disinformation and bad faith actors. If you believe this, you also probably think billionaires might spend their obscene wealth during these calamitous times on raising workers’ wages, fighting hunger and investing in infrastructure. Instead, they are locked in a race to escape Earth altogether. And, based on my own experience working with Facebook, I would bet heavily against them ever doing the right thing.”

Mashable: Why women in tech are so angry all the time . “Not every woman in tech will experience such life-threatening fears; we are not one cohesive unit and have all faced different challenges. Some of us have been harassed or put in uncomfortable situations. Some of us have been underpaid, brought in at lower seniority levels, and not promoted. Most of us, however, experience constant microaggressions. Every woman working in tech I know has at least one story that makes your blood boil. But the more you hear these stories and realize that they are everywhere, you feel frozen and trapped.” Good afternoon, Internet…

Do you like ResearchBuzz? Does it help you out? Please consider supporting it on Patreon. Not interested in commitment? Perhaps you’d buy me an iced tea. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you. Feel free to comment on the blog, or @ResearchBuzz on Twitter. Thanks!



August 2, 2021 at 11:55PM
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