Friday, August 6, 2021

IMDb TV, Dark Patterns, Spotify, More: Friday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 6, 2021

IMDb TV, Dark Patterns, Spotify, More: Friday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 6, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Engadget: IMDb TV now has standalone apps for Android and iOS in the US. “IMDb’s free, ad-supported streaming service finally standalone mobile apps for iPhones, iPads and Android in the US. The Amazon-owned subsidiary released IMDb TV apps for LG Smart TVs, PlayStation 4, NVIDIA Shield and TiVo Stream 4K in March, following its recent expansion to Roku. Up until now, though, you’d have to fire up the IMDb app to access the service’s offerings on mobile.”

USEFUL STUFF

The Conversation: What are dark patterns, and how do they affect you?. “Dark patterns are design elements that deliberately obscure, mislead, coerce and/or deceive website visitors into making unintended and possibly harmful choices. Dark patterns can be found in many kinds of sites and are used by several kinds of organizations. They take the form of deceptively labeled buttons, choices that are difficult to undo, and graphical elements like color and shading that direct users’ attention to or away from certain options.”

Mashable: 10 best websites to analyze your Spotify data. “Every so often a website that analyses Spotify data blows up on Twitter and it is all we see for the next 24 hours. Then it’s just as quickly forgotten. But these websites are still valuable if you want to analyze your listening habits. We’ve scoured the corners of the internet and collected our ten favorite websites that analyze your Spotify data.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Library of Congress: All Hyped Up for HyperCard: Further Adventures with an Apple Legacy Format. “Jacob and Hilary assisted in updating and expanding the Sustainability of Digital Formats website, which provides information and analysis on over 500 digital file formats and offers guidance on the long-term preservation of digital content at the Library. Through their work, they assisted in providing current information on file formats to users at the Library of Congress and throughout the international digital preservation community. In this blog post, Jacob and Hilary discuss their research on the HyperCard file format.”

Japan Times: Learning from disaster: Across Tohoku, a race is on to preserve vital records. “In a public facility run by the town of Okuma in Fukushima Prefecture, located in a designated no-go zone, stacks of cardboard boxes slowly gather dust. The boxes are filled with public documents detailing the March 2011 earthquake and subsequent tsunami, the triple meltdowns at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant and the evacuation that followed — outlining the ordeal Okuma and its residents have been through over the past decade.”

New Zealand Herald: ‘Instagram therapy’: How women use social media for mental health support, solidarity. “Women make up the majority of people living with mood disorders in some countries. However, treatments and resources that are adapted to their needs are still lacking. Looking for ways to feel better, many women are turning to social media platforms like Instagram.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Motherboard: Scammer Service Will Ban Anyone From Instagram for $60. “Scammers are abusing Instagram’s protections against suicide, self-harm, and impersonation to purposefully target and ban Instagram accounts at will, with some people even advertising professionalized ban-as-a-service offerings so anyone can harass or censor others, according to screenshots, interviews, and other material reviewed by Motherboard.”

CBC: Late Winnipeg rapper’s mom sues Google, Facebook for access to son’s accounts. “The mother of late Winnipeg hip-hop artist Jaime Prefontaine is suing Google Inc., Facebook, SoundCloud and SOCAN (the Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada), among others, for the rights to her late son’s accounts.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

UC Santa Barbara: Taming Satellite Data. “More than 700 imaging satellites orbit the Earth, and every day they beam vast amounts of information to databases on the ground. There’s just one problem: While the geospatial data could help researchers and policymakers address critical challenges, only those with considerable wealth and expertise can access it. Now, a team of scientists, including UC Santa Barbara’s Tamma Carleton… has devised a machine learning system to tap the problem-solving potential of satellite imaging.”

Penn Today: Women are undercited and men are overcited in communication. “A new study from the Addiction, Health, & Adolescence (AHA!) Lab at the Annenberg School for Communication found that men are overcited and women are undercited in the field of communication. The researchers’ findings indicate that this problem is most persistent in papers authored by men.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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August 6, 2021 at 11:25PM
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Friday CoronaBuzz, August 6, 2021: 65 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Friday CoronaBuzz, August 6, 2021: 65 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 – MEDICAL/HEALTH

TechCrunch: As the delta variant surges, a nonprofit app lets hospital patients call home for free on any device. “A hospital can request a TeleHome login (provided again, for free). Once it’s installed using that one-time login, patients can use a hospital’s device to send a link via text to another person. Clicking that link will take participants to a Zoom-call like format in an internet browser — regardless of whether they have an iPhone, Android, computer or any other type of device.”

NEW RESOURCES – STATE-SPECIFIC

WREX: Illinois launches new website to track COVID-19 data in long-term care facilities. “To help ensure transparency, the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) announced today that COVID-19 vaccination data for both residents and staff in long-term care (LTC) facilities is now available on the IDPH website.”

UPDATES

CNN: Delta variant now accounts for more than 93% of COVID-19 cases in the US. “The delta variant now accounts for an estimated 93.4% of coronavirus circulating in the United States, according to figures published by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. This includes several sub-lineages of delta, all of which are classified as variants of concern. Together, they made up about 93.4% of cases during the last two weeks of July.”

AP: Sturgis bike rally revs back bigger, despite virus variant. “The rally, which starts Friday, has become a haven for those eager to escape coronavirus precautions. Last year, the rally hardly slowed down, with roughly 460,000 people attending. Masks were mostly ditched as bikers crowded into bars, tattoo parlors and rock shows, offering a lesson in how massive gatherings could spread waves of the virus across the country.”

KTNV: COVID cases up 84% among US kids, teens. “We’re seeing an alarming jump in COVID cases among teens and children in the U.S. Almost 72,000 young Americans caught COVID last week alone, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics. That’s an 84% jump from the week before. And five times higher, than the end of June.”

New York Times: Alarmed Louisiana Residents Turn to Vaccines in ‘Darkest Days’ of Pandemic. “Louisiana is leading the nation in an explosion of new cases. Hospitals are overflowing and admitting more young people than before. But the crisis is also driving some to get vaccinated.”

AP: COVID: In Florida hospitals, ‘there are only so many beds’ . “A South Florida hospital chain is suspending elective surgeries and putting beds in conference rooms, an auditorium and even a cafeteria as many more patients seek treatment for COVID-19.”

Palm Beach Post: COVID and kids: Pediatricians in Palm Beach County seeing ‘alarming rise’ in children being hospitalized. “Pediatricians across Palm Beach County are taking on social media, television and email to warn of a surge in COVID-19 cases among children both locally and across the state. They are concerned not only about the growing number of cases among the young but also about the severity of illness they are witnessing.”

MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

Washington Post: Opinion: Despite all the disinformation, Americans are finally waking up to the covid-19 crisis. “Some rays of sunshine have permeated the Republican fog of coronavirus disinformation. It turns out that despite rather shoddy coverage putting the number of ‘breakthrough’ infections in absolute terms (rather than as a percentage of cases) and ongoing lies from opportunistic politicians, more Americans are waking up to the danger posed by the delta variant.”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

Washington Post: Last-minute eviction ban extension fuels confusion and is too late for some. “A last-minute extension of a moratorium barring evictions for covid-struck counties is injecting a new layer of confusion for millions of renters who had been on the verge of eviction and aren’t sure whether they’ve gotten a reprieve — and for some, it’s too late.”

New York Times: Americans Suffer Pandemic Whiplash as Leaders Struggle With Changing Virus. “An evolving virus and 18 months of ever-changing pandemic messaging have left Americans angry, exhausted and skeptical of public health advice.”

Rolling Stone: Take It From Them: Americans Hospitalized With Covid Regret Not Getting the Vaccine. “The degree to which right-wing influencers like [Phil] Valentine are responsible for the vaccine hesitancy fueling the Covid resurgence can’t be overstated. Local radio hosts, cable news talking heads, and Republicans in Congress have duped tens of millions of Americans into failing to protect themselves and others from the disease. These unvaccinated millions are now coming down with severe cases of Covid at an alarming rate. Like Valentine, many of them are expressing regret that they neglected to get the vaccine.”

ACTIVISM / PROTESTS

NJ .com: Gov. Murphy rips protesters objecting to mandatory vaccinations. ‘You are the ultimate knuckleheads.’. “Gov. Phil Murphy angrily lashed out at a small group of protesters carrying signs objecting to mandatory vaccinations, calling them the ‘ultimate knuckleheads’ during a public bill signing event on a crowded street in Union City on Wednesday.”

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

ABC 7: Nearly a quarter of SoCal hospital workers still unvaccinated, federal data shows. “Nearly a quarter of hospital workers across Southern California still haven’t gotten a COVID-19 shot, according to federal data. The federal figures self-reported by 98 hospitals across the region indicate 22% of their healthcare personnel remain unvaccinated.”

The Advocate: Quantifying Louisiana’s dire hospital staff shortages as COVID hospitalizations break records. “Louisiana forwarded the staffing requests to the federal government last week, and on Monday, Washington responded by dispatching a 33-member disaster support team to Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center in Baton Rouge. While grateful for the help, state officials — who requested nearly 1,700 reinforcements — are under no illusion that the federal government will be able to fill in all the gaps.”

NBC New York: Moderna Says a 3rd Dose of Its COVID-19 Vaccine Will Be Needed Before Winter. “Vaccine maker Moderna believes people who received two doses of its COVID-19 vaccine will need a third dose before winter as a booster shot. The company said Thursday it is also working on a single shot that would provide an annual booster for COVID-19, as well as flu and the respiratory condition RSV.”

HuffPost: ‘Only So Many Beds’: 1,600 Patients Were Admitted To Single Florida Hospital System In A Day. “A hospital chain in Florida’s Broward County, which includes Fort Lauderdale, admitted an astounding 1,600 patients in a single day. At least a third of the patients in the county who were checked into the health care system Wednesday were suffering from COVID-19, The Associated Press reported.”

Texas Tribune: Texas hospitals hit by staffing crisis as burnout depletes workforce and COVID-19 surges. “In Texas, where hospitals are struggling with historically low staffing levels while hospitalizations from the COVID-19 delta variant are skyrocketing, nurses like [Jenna] Price are a hot commodity. There are 23,000 more unfilled jobs in Texas for registered nurses than there are nurses seeking to fill them, according to a labor analysis by the Texas Workforce Commission.”

INSTITUTIONS

Detroit News: New York Auto Show canceled because of COVID-19 surge. “The New York International Automobile Show at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center has been canceled two weeks before it was supposed to happen because of the COVID-19 delta variant and new measures announced recently by state and local officials to stop its spread, officials said Wednesday.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

CNN: Vanguard will pay vaccinated workers $1,000. “Vanguard, one of the world’s largest asset managers, is offering employees $1,000 to get vaccinated. The incentive shows how aggressively some companies are moving to encourage workers to get vaccinated as concerns about the Delta variant mount. All of Vanguard’s approximately 15,500 US employees are eligible and must show proof of vaccination by October 1.”

Above the Law: Davis Polk To Deactivate Building ID Cards Of Unvaccinated Lawyers And Staff. “Want to go back to the office? If you’re an employee at Davis Polk, that means you’d better be fully vaccinated — as soon as possible — because without proof, you will not be welcomed back to the firm. In fact, you won’t even be able to get inside the building because your access pass will be deactivated.”

Yelp Blog: Yelp Helps Businesses Communicate Vaccination Requirements. “With the uncertainty surrounding the spread of the COVID Delta variant, we’re seeing an increasing number of businesses implement new safety measures to protect their employees and communities. To help consumers understand how a business is currently operating as pandemic guidelines continue to evolve, today, Yelp is announcing two new, free attributes – ‘Proof of vaccination required’ and ‘All staff fully vaccinated.'”

CNN: Amazon is delaying its return to office until 2022. “Amazon on Thursday pushed back its office return date until early next year amid a surge in Covid-19 cases from the Delta variant, making it one of the most significant delays yet in the tech industry.”

New York Times: CNN fires three employees who went into the office unvaccinated.. “CNN said on Thursday that it had fired three employees who violated its coronavirus safety protocols by going to the office unvaccinated, one of the first known examples of a major American corporation’s terminating workers for ignoring a workplace vaccination mandate.”

WORLD / FEDERAL GOVERNMENT

NBC News: England reopened amid a delta surge, then cases fell. Are there lessons for the U.S.?. “The U.K. boasts one of the world’s most successful campaigns, with more than 88 percent of adults receiving one dose, and 73 percent a second, according to government data as of Wednesday. For the U.S., that drops to 70 percent for one dose and 60 percent for two — and rates are far lower in Southern states such as Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and Mississippi. Officials there are now in the same race of vaccine-versus-variant that Britain has been battling this summer.”

CNN: Defense Secretary Austin expected to make Covid-19 vaccine mandatory for active duty troops. “Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin is expected to seek authorization to make Covid-19 vaccines mandatory for all active duty troops as soon as this week, following President Joe Biden’s directive that the military examine how and when it could make that happen.”

Poynter: What’s happening with the federal eviction moratorium and rental assistance?. “The eviction moratorium that gave millions of households a cushion as the pandemic upended their lives expired July 31. Now top Democrats are at odds over how to get it started again.”

CNN: Exclusive: Intel agencies scour reams of genetic data from Wuhan lab in Covid origins hunt . “US intelligence agencies are digging through a treasure trove of genetic data that could be key to uncovering the origins of the coronavirus — as soon as they can decipher it. This giant catalog of information contains genetic blueprints drawn from virus samples studied at the lab in Wuhan, China which some officials believe may have been the source of the Covid-19 outbreak, multiple people familiar with the matter tell CNN.”

AP: France’s Macron uses social media to push for vaccination “French President Emmanuel Macron has taken to popular social media apps in a new push to encourage vaccinations against COVID-19, combat ‘false information’ and reach out to younger people.”

Daily Beast: Tokyo Covered Up Arrival of Deadly New COVID Variant Just Before the Olympics. “Three days before the Olympics began, on July 20, Japan’s National Institute of Infectious Diseases (NIID) reported to an international organization that the highly infectious Lambda variant had been detected in an airport test in Japan for the first time, but did not announce it widely to the public.”

Washington Post: Education Secretary Cardona criticizes Republican governors for banning mask mandates: ‘Our kids have suffered enough’. “Education Secretary Miguel Cardona criticized two Republican governors Thursday for banning mask mandates in their states, arguing that their actions are preventing children from safely returning to school. Cardona made the remarks in response to a question from a reporter about the recent moves by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R). The more contagious delta variant coupled with vaccine holdouts have led to a national surge in coronavirus infections, hospitalizations and deaths in recent weeks, with Texas and Florida among the hardest-hit states.”

STATE GOVERNMENT

AP: Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson regrets law prohibiting mask mandates. “Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson pressed forward Tuesday with efforts to allow schools to mandate face masks as the state’s coronavirus cases continued to spiral, but faced heavy opposition from fellow Republicans over the move.”

State of North Carolina: North Carolina to Require Vaccine Verification for State Employees, Urges Other Government Agencies and Private Employers to do the Same. “Today, Governor Roy Cooper and North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Mandy K. Cohen, M.D. announced that state government would begin verifying vaccination status of its workers. Employees not vaccinated are required to wear a mask and be tested at least once a week. Today’s announcement comes as North Carolina’s latest upswing in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations is driven by unvaccinated North Carolinians.”

Raw Story: DeSantis refuses to declare state of emergency for COVID — and it’s leaving hospitals short of oxygen: report. “Bloomberg reports that DeSantis’s refusal to re-declare a state of emergency over the pandemic is leaving Florida hospitals scrambling to secure enough oxygen to treat COVID patients who are struggling to breathe. Essentially, unless DeSantis declares a state of emergency, then there are limits to how long medical support transport drivers can be on the road.”

KPTV: Get tested often or get vaccinated: Brown orders new pandemic rule for Oregon health care workers. “A new rule announced by Governor Kate Brown on Wednesday will require employees in health care settings statewide to either undergo weekly testing for COVID-19 or verify their vaccination status.”

North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services: North Carolina Offers $100 Cards for First-time COVID-19 Vaccinations, and $25 Cards for Drivers. “As part of its effort to help more North Carolinians protect themselves against COVID-19 and the highly contagious Delta variant, North Carolina is now offering $100 Summer Cards at some vaccine sites across the state to offset the time and transportation costs of getting vaccinated. From Aug. 4 through Aug. 31, the $100 Summer Cards are available to anyone 18 and older who gets their first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine at a participating site—while supplies last.”

WTHR: West Lafayette mayor reiterates derogatory reference about unvaccinated residents. “The mayor of West Lafayette is making headlines after comments he made about unvaccinated residents during a COVID-19 briefing Wednesday…. ‘I lost my temper at a council meeting recently and called these people unvaccinated a**holes and, unfortunately, sometimes that’s accurate. That’s true,’ [John] Dennis said about 35 minutes into the video.”

Washington Post: Md., Va. governors say state workers need to show proof of covid vaccination or get tested. “The governors of Virginia and Maryland on Thursday announced some state employees would be required to get vaccinated or get tested regularly for the coronavirus, but neither said he would reimpose a mask mandate as cases in the region continue to increase. Meanwhile leaders of several localities in Maryland — including Montgomery County, the state’s most populous jurisdiction, and Prince George’s County, the second-largest and the hardest hit by the virus — announced they were requiring indoor masks for everyone, regardless of vaccination status, as much of the state reached a ‘substantial’ level of coronavirus transmission.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

Daily Beast: Missouri Coroner Admits to Excluding COVID-19 From Death Certificates. “A coroner in one Missouri county has admitted to removing COVID-19 as the cause of death on at least half a dozen death certificates, the Kansas City Star reports. The virus was reportedly left off the death certificate in cases where other factors could have been the main cause of death.”

WDSU: COVID-19 vaccine required for all New Orleans deputy constables ahead of heavy eviction workload. “Deputies with the First and Second City Courts of New Orleans will be required to get a coronavirus vaccination. Constable Edwin M. Shorty Jr. has mandated all commissioned deputies must be vaccinated as COVID-19 case counts are rising with the spread of the delta variant.”

New York Times: New York City’s Vaccine Passport Plan Renews Online Privacy Debate. “When New York City announced on Tuesday that it would soon require people to show proof of at least one coronavirus vaccine shot to enter businesses, Mayor Bill de Blasio said the system was ‘simple — just show it and you’re in.’ Less simple was the privacy debate that the city reignited.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

Mashable: Oh nothing, just Eurovision winner Lordi casually getting the COVID-19 vaccine. “We’ve seen a fair few inspiring images of famous people posting photos of themselves getting the COVID-19 vaccine, but few rival a photograph taken on Sunday. Tomi Petteri Putaansuu of the Finnish hard rock band Lordi got his second dose of the COVID-19 vaccination on Sunday, in full garb.”

Baptist News Global: Evangelist dies of COVID just 25 days after preaching at a huge Baptist youth camp. “A popular youth evangelist who preached at one of the nation’s largest Baptist youth camps July 5-9 has died of COVID pneumonia less than a month later. Some parents had complained that their teenagers came home from Falls Creek Assembly with COVID infections, but the camp’s managers said those infections represented a small percentage of the 30,000 campers who attended over seven weeks.”

New York Times: Obama Significantly Scales Back 60th Birthday Party as Virus Cases Rebound. “The party plans had been months in the making and many invitees had already arrived on Martha’s Vineyard when former President Barack Obama belatedly announced he was canceling his huge 60th birthday bash scheduled for Saturday.”

The Guardian: Fitness enthusiast, 42, who rejected vaccine, dies of Covid. “A ‘fit and healthy’ 42-year-old who loved climbing mountains and lifting weights has died of Covid-19 after refusing to get vaccinated, leaving his twin sister and mother heartbroken. The two women warned others not to think they are invulnerable to the dangers of the virus.”

New Zealand Herald: Google billionaire visited New Zealand while the country’s border was closed. “Google co-founder Larry Page travelled to New Zealand to get hospital treatment for his young child despite the country’s borders being closed. The billionaire does not have New Zealand citizenship, but according to multiple reports is spending the Covid-19 pandemic on an island in Fiji.”

BBC: Paul Johnson: Chicago house music DJ dies at 50 after catching Covid. “Influential Chicago house music DJ Paul Johnson has died at the age of 50 after contracting Covid-19. Johnson, who had a global hit with Get Get Down in 1999 and was named as an influence by Daft Punk, had spent several weeks in hospital.”

WRAL: ‘See you soon, idiots’: Raleigh man puts 13-ft skeleton in his yard to encourage vaccinations. “[Jesse Jones] hopes he will at least convince one person to get vaccinated with his yard display. In his yard stands a 13-foot tall skeleton, depicting an unvaccinated person, with a sign hanging on him that says, ‘Not vaccinated, see you soon, idiots!'”

SPORTS

Brown County Democrat: COVID-19 cases could be linked to Bucks’ championship run. “Health officials have identified nearly 500 coronavirus cases statewide that could be linked to the large crowds that gathered in downtown Milwaukee as fans cheered on the Bucks’ run to the NBA championship.”

K-12 EDUCATION

12 News: COVID-19 outbreak increases to 32 cases at Hamilton High School in Chandler. “Hamilton High School in Chandler reported there are 32 active COVID-19 cases among its staff and students on Tuesday, according to the Chandler Unified School District’s COVID-19 dashboard. The new amount of cases is three times higher than the next highest amount of COVID-19 cases in the district. Chandler High School is at 10 cases.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

KSTP: Hundreds of U of M professors push for vaccine mandate. “University of Minnesota professors are mulling a work stoppage if the university refuses to impose a COVID-19 vaccine mandate, according to American Association of University Professors meeting minutes and documents obtained by 5 EYEWITNESS NEWS. More than 500 faculty and students have signed on to a letter endorsing a vaccine requirement.”

HEALTH

New York Times: Is the Delta Variant Making Younger Adults ‘Sicker, Quicker’?. “Recently, a 28-year-old patient died of Covid-19 at CoxHealth Medical Center in Springfield, Mo. Last week, a 21-year-old college student was admitted to intensive care. Many of the patients with Covid-19 now arriving at the hospital are not just unvaccinated — they are much younger than 50, a stark departure from the frail, older patients seen when the pandemic first surged last year.”

New Yorker: How the Delta Variant Is Changing the Public-Health Playbook. “I recently spoke by phone with Rebecca Weintraub, an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School and the director of the Better Evidence program at Ariadne Labs. Since the pandemic began, Weintraub, who is also a practicing internist, has been working with health officials across the country and around the world, advising them on vaccination efforts. ”

Boing Boing: People who contracted Covid may have “substantial” drop in intelligence, according to The Lancet. “A new paper published in the peer-reviewed journal The Lancet found that ‘People who had recovered from COVID-19, including those no longer reporting symptoms, exhibited significant cognitive deficits versus controls.'”

TECHNOLOGY

TechCrunch: Pokémon GO influencers threaten a boycott after Niantic removes COVID safety measures. “One new incentive gives users 10x XP for visiting a new PokéStop for the first time (or, in real-world terms, visiting a new place). But as the delta variant spreads in the U.S., players find these changes to be frustrating and misguided. Why roll back features that made the game more accessible while also netting the company more money?”

Ars Technica: Big tech companies are at war with employees over remote work. “All across the United States, the leaders at large tech companies like Apple, Google, and Facebook are engaged in a delicate dance with thousands of employees who have recently become convinced that physically commuting to an office every day is an empty and unacceptable demand from their employers.”

RESEARCH

Jerusalem Post: COVID: 90% of patients treated with new Israeli drug discharged in 5 days. “The Phase II trial for an Israeli COVID drug confirmed the results of Phase I, which was conducted in Israel last winter and saw some 29 out of 30 patients moderate to serious recover within days.”

NBC News: Unvaccinated Americans not changing their behavior, report finds. “Unvaccinated Americans believe the vaccines are more dangerous than Covid-19, while vaccinated Americans believe the delta variant is worrisome enough that they continue to mask in public and avoid large gatherings. And even though almost 165 million people in the U.S. are fully vaccinated and the delta variant is raging across the country, the percentage of U.S. adults who say they oppose the Covid vaccines has remained unchanged since December, according to a report from the Kaiser Family Foundation.”

Carnegie Mellon University: Text Reminders Boost Vaccine Appointments. “Researchers find text messages that impart psychological ownership are an effective method to encourage people to sign up and show up for COVID-19 vaccinations.”

NewsWise: Research Shows Many with Mild COVID-19 Infections Still Experience Long-Term Symptoms. “The majority of individuals who experience mild or moderate COVID-19 infection also experience long COVID, or persistent symptoms more than 30 days after they test positive, according to research data from the longitudinal CoVHORT study at the University of Arizona Health Sciences.”

OUTBREAKS

Poynter: Going deeper on the Massachusetts COVID outbreak that led to the CDC’s mask reversal. “I want to give you some deeper details about a COVID-19 outbreak in Barnstable County, Massachusetts. This is the case that alerted experts at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to a new understanding about whether vaccinated people can pass the virus to others. This new evidence led the CDC to alter its recommendation about whether vaccinated individuals should wear masks indoors.”

CRIME / SECURITY / LEGAL

BBC: Canada fines travellers for fake vaccination and testing papers. “Canada has fined two travellers arriving from the US who, officials say, forged Covid-19 testing and vaccination documents. Each was fined C$19,720 ($16,000, £11,500) after inspectors at the Toronto airport found their vaccine cards and proof of testing were fake.”

Washington Post: Real estate, landlord groups file legal salvo to stop Biden administration’s new eviction moratorium. “Only one day after the Biden administration issued a new policy protecting renters from eviction, a series of real estate and landlord groups is trying to invalidate it — setting up another legal showdown over a moratorium that Democrats say is essential to keeping Americans in their homes.”

ABC News: ‘Unprecedented’ fraud penetrated rollout of COVID-19 small business loans, watchdog warns. “As small businesses emerge from the pandemic, the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) and the Economic Injury Disaster Loans (EIDL), two key relief programs passed as part of the congressional CARES Act, are winding down. But for all the jobs they’ve rescued, their legacies may be tarnished by unprecedented amounts of fraud — a reality that experts fear may impair efforts to pass future emergency relief programs.”

OPINION

Baltimore Sun: I went to a party with 14 other vaccinated people; 11 of us got COVID | COMMENTARY. “Fortunately, none of us seems to be seriously ill. When fully vaccinated people experience so-called ‘breakthrough’ infection, they tend not to progress to serious disease requiring hospitalization, and I expect that will be the case for us. But I can tell you that even a ‘mild’ case of COVID-19 is pretty miserable. I’ve had fever, chills and muscle aches, and I’ve been weak enough that I can barely get out of bed. I don’t wish this on anybody.”

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August 6, 2021 at 07:17PM
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Progressive Hearing Loss, 2020 Census, Quora, More: Friday ResearchBuzz, August 6, 2021

Progressive Hearing Loss, 2020 Census, Quora, More: Friday ResearchBuzz, August 6, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

University of Maryland Baltimore: New Portal Aids Discoveries To Reverse Hearing Loss. “Researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) have launched a new online tool that could more quickly advance medical discoveries to reverse progressive hearing loss.”

EVENTS

US Census Bureau: Census Bureau to Hold News Conference on Release of 2020 Census Redistricting Data. “The news conference will provide initial analysis of the first local level results from the 2020 Census on population change, race, ethnicity, the age 18 and over population, and housing occupancy status. A live Q&A session with Census Bureau subject-matter experts will immediately follow the briefing for credentialed media who have RSVPed.” Thursday August 12 at 1pm.

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

TechCrunch: Creators can now monetize their expertise on Quora. “Quora’s first new product is Quora+ — subscribers will pay a $5 monthly fee or a $50 yearly fee to access content that any creator chooses to put behind a paywall. These are the same rates that Medium, which has no ads, charges for its membership program.”

Search Engine Journal: WordPress Releases Gutenberg 11.2 – Offers Improved Performance & Bug Fixes. “WordPress announced the release of the newest version of Gutenberg which is now at 11.2. This is an incremental update in that it’s not a major upgrade. Nevertheless it does contain a slight performance improvement to the editor as well as numerous bug fixes and feature additions that makes version 11.2 a notable upgrade.”

USEFUL STUFF

CNET: How to improve your TV’s speech and get rid of muffled dialog. “If you’re struggling to understand the dialog in your new favorite show, it’s most likely the TV’s tiny speakers that are to blame. However, there could be other causes — for example, if you find that people’s lips are moving but speech isn’t correlating, you may need help with a lip-sync issue. If your main problem is that dialog sounds muffled and incomprehensible, whether you’re using a TV speaker or a separate sound system, here are three things you can do to fix it.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Mashable: Trauma memes are taking over the internet. Why that can be a good thing.. “When [Erin] Taylor creates these memes, she’s digging into her own trauma and using art and humor as a way to communicate that. She says it can feel cathartic to create. But these memes can also be helpful and healing to the audience, Theresa Nguyen, the chief program officer at Mental Health America, told Mashable.”

AdAge: Everything You Need To Know About TikTok Advertising . “In the first half of this year, TikTok became the most downloaded non-Facebook, non-gaming app globally, topping 3 million downloads. While some brands might be hesitant or unsure of where their brand fits into the app, those who have taken the plunge have often been rewarded (even if fleetingly). Below, Ad Age has compiled what advertisers should know about TikTok creators, e-commerce opportunities and more.” The “3 million downloads” is an apparent typo; TikTok has had over three BILLION downloads.

SECURITY & LEGAL

BBC: Turkish influencer prosecuted ‘for photos at Amsterdam sex museum’. “A Turkish social media influencer says she’s being prosecuted in her country for posting ‘joke’ photos inside the world-famous Sex Museum in Amsterdam. Merve Taskin, 23, shared pictures of sex toys she bought at the museum during a birthday trip to the Netherlands in January last year.”

The Daily Beast: Scandal, Spyware, and 69 Pounds of Weed. “Amid the furor over the abuse of NSO’s powerful spyware, the story of how the company landed its first contract with Mexico has largely escaped attention. It’s a deal that might never have come together were it not for the behind-the-scenes efforts of an influential, twice-convicted Republican powerbroker: Elliott Broidy.”

Techdirt: Olympics Copyright Insanity Rules Again: Gold Medal Winner Blocked From Sharing Her Own Victory. “Elaine Thompson-Herah of Jamaica won both the women’s 100 meter and 200 meter gold medals at the Olympics this year, and then did the super piratey thing of… excitedly posting snippets of her victories to Instagram, which responded by blocking her account for copyright violations.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Engadget: Pentagon believes its precognitive AI can predict events ‘days in advance’. “The US military’s AI experiments are growing particularly ambitious. The Drive reports that US Northern Command recently completed a string of tests for Global Information Dominance Experiments (GIDE), a combination of AI, cloud computing and sensors that could give the Pentagon the ability to predict events ‘days in advance,’ according to Command leader General Glen VanHerck.”

The Register: Paperless office? 2.8 trillion pages printed in 2020, down by 14% or 450 billion sheets . “Around 450 billion fewer pages were printed from home and office devices in 2020 as COVID-19 disrupted the world of work. The direction of travel has been obvious in recent times: people were printing less even before the pandemic took hold, but the decline was sharper last year as volumes plunged 14 per cent on 2019 levels to a total of 2.8 trillion pages, according to IDC.” Good morning, Internet…

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August 6, 2021 at 05:25PM
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Thursday, August 5, 2021

TikTok, YouTube, Google Sheets, More: Thursday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 5, 2021

TikTok, YouTube, Google Sheets, More: Thursday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 5, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Mashable: TikTok is testing Stories and time is a flat circle . “In the internet is eating itself news, TikTok is apparently launching a new feature: Stories Yep, the app that has caused every other social media company to scramble and create short-form video TikTok clones is now copying the last thing those other apps really had going for them.”

Tubefilter: YouTube Will Disperse Monthly Payments From $100 To $10,000 To Thousands Of Creators Through New ‘Shorts Fund’. “YouTube’s previously-announced Shorts Fund, a $100 million commitment to creators of TikTok-like videos, is launching today and will begin to compensate creators this month, the company said.”

USEFUL STUFF

Search Engine Journal: How to Use Google Sheets for Web Scraping & Campaign Building. “According to Google’s support page, IMPORTXML ‘imports data from any of various structured data types including XML, HTML, CSV, TSV, and RSS and ATOM XML feeds.’ Essentially, IMPORTXML is a function allows you to scrape structured data from webpages — no coding knowledge required. For example, it’s quick and easy to extract data such as page titles, descriptions, or links, but also more complex information.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Hartford Courant: New Instagram series, by Gov. Lamont, will highlight state businesses across the state. First episode goes behind the scenes at Pepe’s Pizza.. “Gov. Ned Lamont was taken behind the scenes of the famous Frank Pepe Pizzeria Napoletana in New Haven in the debut episode of ‘Made by Connecticut,’ a new Instagram series introduced by the governor, which will highlight businesses across the state.”

Al-Fanar Media: One Year After the Beirut Blast, Technology Keeps Memories Fresh. “On August 4, 2020, at 6:08 p.m., time stood still in Beirut as the city’s port erupted in an explosion that killed hundreds of people and injured thousands more. Though it has been a year since the blast happened, to many of Beirut’s residents, it feels like yesterday. Memories of this day remain crystal clear, thanks in part to digital technology. The devastating blast was preceded by a smaller explosion and fire in a warehouse, and people already had their mobile-phone cameras trained on the port when the second, colossal explosion occurred. Thus, they were able to document the blast as it happened, as well as its aftermath.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Wired: Watch a Hacker Hijack a Capsule Hotel’s Lights, Fans, and Beds. “A TRAVEL TIP: When staying in a ‘capsule hotel,’ the Japanese style of budget accommodation that packs guests into tiny, adjoining rooms not much bigger than their bodies, be considerate of your neighbors. Especially if the capsule hotel you’re staying in offers digital automation features—and a hacker is staying in the next room over.”

The Verge: Colleges across the US and Canada are adopting virtual student IDs. “Apple Wallet has supported contactless student IDs since 2018, with three US universities supporting the feature at launch. The program has been gradually expanding ever since. Yesterday, the company announced that its virtual IDs will finally arrive in Canada this fall. An unspecified number of additional US universities will adopt it for the first time as well.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Penn Today: How racial bias can limit internet access for people of color. “A new study from the Annenberg School for Communication, published in the Journal of Communication, investigates the ways that institutions control who has access to WiFi, and the findings indicate that quality-of-life policing—the report and/or arrest of individuals engaged in nonviolent offenses such as loitering, noise violations, and public intoxication—is used by powerful institutions and privileged people to keep those with less privilege, including people of color, from accessing resources like the internet.”

Ars Technica: If YouTube’s algorithms radicalize people, it’s hard to tell from the data. “…there has been a steady stream of stories about how the process has radicalized people, sending them down an ever-deepening rabbit hole until all their viewing is dominated by fringe ideas and conspiracy theories. A new study released on Monday looks at whether these stories represent a larger trend or are just a collection of anecdotes. While the data can’t rule out the existence of online radicalization, it definitely suggests that it’s not the most common experience. Instead, it seems like fringe ideas are simply part of a larger self-reinforcing community.”

Irish Examiner: Academics using 3D technology to protect Ogham writing. “Irish and Scottish academics are using digital and 3D technologies to protect ancient Celtic Ogham writings. The 1,500-year-old alphabet appears on monuments and objects dating back to the fourth century, as well as manuscripts from the ninth century, and can be found in Ireland and Britain.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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August 6, 2021 at 12:00AM
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Face Image Meta-Database, Washington Wineries, DoD Jobs, More: Thursday ResearchBuzz, August 5, 2021

Face Image Meta-Database, Washington Wineries, DoD Jobs, More: Thursday ResearchBuzz, August 5, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Psychology Today: The Diversity Problem in Face Research. “In a recent paper published in Methods in Psychology, we describe a novel tool for connecting face researchers to the image databases best suited to their research: the ‘Face Image Meta-Database,’ or ‘fIMDb’ for short (Workman & Chatterjee, 2021). The fIMDb is a ‘meta-database’ that indexes known face databases, their characteristics, and how to access them. The fIMDb enables users to build custom searches that, importantly, can be used to filter out stimulus sets with limited diversity. The fIMDb also allows user submissions of new databases and revisions to existing databases. To date, the fIMDb links to 127 different sources for faces that together contain over 4 million images.”

KXLY: New phone app connects you to the nearest Washington winery. “Map My WA Wine is available on both iPhone and Android devices, and helps wine lovers search hundreds of Washington wineries, tasting rooms and vineyards. Planning a trip? You can use the app to create and share itineraries, see what events are happening and search for wineries that are pet-friendly, have live music, serve food and more.”

U.S. Department of Defense: Website Informs Civilians About DOD Opportunities. “The website project’s team lead said the site is primarily a recruitment tool; the website’s purposes were to educate folks about civilian employment and help them explore where they might find their fit within the organization…. There are more than 600 civilian occupations in the DOD. There are all kinds of careers from scientists and engineers to artists to human resource personnel to intelligence analysts to medical professionals.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

BetaNews: Microsoft pauses Windows 365 trials after running out of capacity. “Microsoft introduced its subscription-based Windows 365 last month, and earlier in the week announced general availability for the service that makes it possible to run full versions of Windows 10 and Windows 11 in the cloud. If your business was planning on joining the Cloud PC revolution but hasn’t already done so, you might have a bit of a wait on your hands before you can take the service for a spin — struggling to keep up with demand, Microsoft has paused its free trials.”

TechCrunch: Twitter partners with AP and Reuters to address misinformation on its platform. “Through the new agreements, Twitter’s Curation team will be able to leverage the expertise of the partnered organizations to add more context to the news and trends that circulate across Twitter, as well as aid with the company’s use of public service announcements during high-visibility events, misinformation labels and more.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

New York Times: The Subscription Buffet May Be Over. “Some companies including Disney and Whole Foods, the grocery chain that is owned by Amazon, are charging subscribers more for compelling extras. Others including Spotify and YouTube are experimenting with subscriptions that cost less but come with compromises. Both strategies may show that the endless digital buffet is changing for good.”

AllAfrica: Kenya: New Portal to Curb Academic Dishonesty. “The pace to rid the country of fake certificates is quickly gathering momentum with 74 public universities registering to list their graduates in a central database that will lock out academic cheats. The registration exercise by the institutions to be considered as Qualifications Awarding Institutions will close on September 30.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Infosecurity Magazine: Over 60 Million Americans Exposed Through Misconfigured Database. “Security researchers have discovered an online database completely unsecured and exposed to the public internet, containing the personal details of at least 63 million Americans. A team at vpnMentor led by Ran Locar and Noam Rotem found the Elasticsearch database wide open during a ‘routine research project.'”

BBC: MP Maria Miller wants AI ‘nudifying’ tool banned. “MP Maria Miller wants a parliamentary debate on whether digitally generated nude images need to be banned. It comes as another service which allows users to undress women in photos, using Artificial intelligence (AI), spreads rapidly on social media. The website in question had more than five million visits in June alone, according to one analyst.”

Techdirt: Man Sues Multiple Social Media Services, Claims Banning His Accounts Violates The Civil Rights Act. “Everybody wants to sue social media platforms for (allegedly) violating the First Amendment by removing content that most platforms don’t feel compelled to host. Most of what’s sued over is a mixture of abusive trolling, misinformation, bigoted rhetoric, and harassment. Plaintiffs ignore the fact that private companies can’t violate the First Amendment. The First Amendment does not guarantee anyone the right to an audience or the continued use of someone’s services.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Phys.org: Finding friends of friends on social media . “A quick way to identify the ‘nth’ friends of social media users based on spatial data mining of profiles and behavior on a service such as Twitter is described in the International Journal of Advanced Intelligence Paradigms.”

Reebok: Reebok’s “Courting Greatness” AR Tool, Campaign Empowers Players to Create Basketball Courts Anywhere. “Central to the campaign is a digital tool that utilizes augmented reality to help players map out court features anywhere – on walls, fences, parking lots and alleyways. Throughout the season, to inspire creativity and build awareness around the tool, Reebok will work with local artists in major cities to construct playable basketball art installations, with the first coming from NYC creative collective New York Sunshine that will honor the upcoming Question Mid ‘Iverson Four’.” 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 5, 2021 at 05:25PM
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Wednesday, August 4, 2021

Chromebooks, Getty, Fake Cormac McCarthy, More: Wednesday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 4, 2021

Chromebooks, Getty, Fake Cormac McCarthy, More: Wednesday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 4, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Google Blog: Express yourself and connect with others on Chromebooks. “Many people this past year used Chromebooks to keep in touch with family and friends, stay entertained and work or learn from home. Today, we’re introducing a few new features that make connecting and communicating with others — on video chat or through text — even easier.”

Getty: We Challenged You to Create a Still Life—Here Are the Gorgeous Results. “We recently issued a challenge on social media for you to create your own still life artwork: a work of art that shows inanimate objects from the natural or man-made world. Since this past year has been, well, a lot, we wanted to see which objects helped you get through it—and how you would turn them into a work of art. We were thoroughly impressed with the thoughtful, imaginative ways you interpreted the challenge and found beauty in the mundane yet stressful year we’ve all had.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Mashable: Twitter verified a fake Cormac McCarthy account. “Cormac McCarthy was just verified on Twitter! No, not the real one, who wrote some of the worlds most famous novels including No Country For Old Men and Blood Meridian. But a person pretending to be Cormac McCarthy — with 48,500 followers and the bio ‘my publicist insists this is a worthwhile use of my remaining time’ — was verified for a brief time on Monday.”

The Verge: Elite Students Are Debating Hot-Button Issues On An Invite-only Tiktok Clone. “This is Polemix, a new, exclusive app aimed at promoting free discourse among young people. As the world’s biggest social networks continuously battle misinformation and draw controversial lines between dangerous and appropriate speech, the founders of Polemix believe they’ve found a better solution: a free market of ideas, with selective admission. So far, the app has attracted a young community that’s eloquent, outspoken, and passionate about the app’s stated philosophy. But it has also served as a microcosmic experiment with online debate culture in concentrated form, and a real-world demonstration of the caveats required to bring such a lofty ideal to life.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Wirecutter: You Don’t Really Own the Digital Movies You Buy. “As the entertainment industry shifts its distribution strategy to let people buy or rent movies closer to—or simultaneously with—their release in theaters, you may find yourself amassing a larger digital library than you’ve had in the past. But when you buy a movie from a digital service like Amazon Prime Video or Vudu, does it really belong to you? What if you buy a song on iTunes or download one to your phone from Spotify? Are these files yours forever? If you cancel the service or, as unlikely as it may seem, one of these huge companies goes out of business, what then?”

Techdirt: Copyright Ruins Everything Again: How Dare A Sports Writer Get People Excited About The Olympics!. “Every few years, the Olympics comes along to remind us not so much about the power of personal triumphs in sports, but the vast overreach of copyright laws to control absolutely everything for no damn reason at all.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Mozilla Blog: Why Facebook’s claims about the Ad Observer are wrong. “The truth is that major platforms continue to be a safe haven for disinformation and extremism —wreaking havoc on people, our elections and society. That is why we’ve pushed the industry through the EU’s Code of Practice on Disinformation, encouraged the European Commission to mandate disclosure of all advertisements on major platforms and encouraged users to contribute their data to Ad Observer. We need tools like Ad Observer to help us shine a light on the darkest corners of the web. And rather than standing in the way of efforts to hold platforms accountable, we all need to work together to support and improve these tools.”

CNET: 3,700-year-old clay tablet shows we’ve been using geometry for longer than we realized. “Despite what you may have thought in school, all those numbers and angles really can come in handy — something that even surveyors in ancient Babylon knew. The etchings on the clay tablet pictured above reveal that people have been using geometry in everyday life for centuries longer than many have assumed. The tablet is known as Si.427, and it dates back to the Old Babylonian Period between 1900 and 1600 BCE.”

CogDogBlog: It’s a CogDog Thing: Google Has Crossed The Line Adserving My Name. “We are literally frogs in the internet pan of water, with Google at al just incrementally turning up the surveillance capitalism flame every so gently that we just never notice the boil. So yes, it’s a tad creepy to see ads show up in say Instagram for products I have recently been searching for in Google (never stopping to think how this data is traveling between 2 of the big data competitors). But I keep on clicking, Maybe even marvel It’s warm in the pan.”

OTHER STUFF I THINK IS COOL

Boing Boing: There’s an official $#@&ing terminology for censoring swears like $#@&: Grawlix. “this tweet was the first time I have ever seen a “$&%#@!” word referred to as ‘Grawlix.’ It’s one of those weird linguistic things that I’ve always just accepted, and taken for granted, without considering that someone would have named, identified, and categorized it. According to a 2013 article from Slate, the term ‘grawlix’ was coined by Beetle Bailey creator Mort Walker.” 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 5, 2021 at 05:21AM
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Upworthy Research Archive, WhatsApp, TikTok, More: Wednesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 4, 2021

Upworthy Research Archive, WhatsApp, TikTok, More: Wednesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 4, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Scientific Data: The Upworthy Research Archive, a time series of 32,487 experiments in U.S. media . “This archive records the stimuli and outcome for every A/B test fielded by Upworthy between January 24, 2013 and April 30, 2015. In total, the archive includes 32,487 experiments, 150,817 experiment arms, and 538,272,878 participant assignments. The open access dataset is organized to support exploratory and confirmatory research, as well as meta-scientific research on ways that scientists make use of the archive.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Ubergizmo: Facebook Reportedly Researching How To Analyze Your Encrypted WhatsApp Messages. “According to a report from The Information (paywall), it seems that Facebook is apparently researching ways that they might be able to analyze your messages, even if it was encrypted. We’re not talking about Facebook trying to break their own encryption, but rather to make sense of already-encrypted data and to extract information from it that could in turn be used to help bolster targeted advertising.”

Mashable: American Airlines adds TikTok to free inflight entertainment. “Passengers now get 30 minutes of free TikTok access on all American Airlines single-aisle planes equipped with Viasat WiFi. While the airline’s library of movies, shows, and online learning classes are also free, browsing the internet will cost you (starting at $10 per session or $49.95 for a monthly subscription.)”

USEFUL STUFF

Search Engine Journal: Image Alt Text vs. Title Text vs. File Names: What’s the Difference?. “In this post, you’ll learn about the differences between the image alt attribute, image title text, and image file name, and find recommendations on how to better optimize them for search.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

TechRadar: Yandex search engine review . “Yandex offers a search engine experience close to that of Google and Bing, but like its two major competitors, the company’s user-data practices are less than desirable.”

CNET: Microsoft, Facebook and everyone else are building the metaverse — but will you want to live there?. “The definition of metaverse, now, is sort of a future-forward social hub, a space where avatars can meet, an ecosystem for connected apps. A VR- and AR-ready dream of bringing people into some sort of virtual universe that’s as creation-friendly as a Minecraft, as popular as a Fortnite, and as useful as Zoom, Slack and Google Docs. Metaverses are perhaps the clearest admission yet that the future of tech doesn’t lie just in VR or AR, but in a mix of many devices accessing a shared online world, which may be more immersive and 3D than the internet you’re currently using to read this story.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Ars Technica: With help from Google, impersonated Brave. com website pushes malware. “Scammers have been caught using a clever sleight of hand to impersonate the website for the Brave browser and using it in Google ads to push malware that takes control of browsers and steals sensitive data.”

The Verge: A man violated a restraining order by renaming his estranged wife’s Napster playlists. “An Ohio man harassed his estranged wife through a shared Napster account, evading a no-contact order by changing the titles of playlists. Ohio’s Eighth District Court of Appeals outlined the case in a July 29th ruling, which was flagged on Twitter by writer and attorney Eric Goldman. It’s an example of how metadata can become a vector for harassment outside major social platforms — echoing long-standing problems on other services like Spotify.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Tech Xplore: Turning network traffic data into music. “Cybersecurity analysts deal with an enormous amount of data, especially when monitoring network traffic. If one were to print the data in text form, a single day’s worth of network traffic may be akin to a thick phonebook. In other words, detecting an abnormality is like finding a needle in a haystack.”

The Michigan Daily: Outlet or audience: introspections on my private story. “Maybe my private story really is a rare outlet for authenticity on social media. Or maybe it’s just a small stage, somewhere for me to perform a different role. In reality, I’m sure it’s somewhere in between. As my life takes place more and more in a digital space, it’s becoming nearly impossible to separate my actions from my acting and myself from the performer.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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August 4, 2021 at 11:53PM
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