Monday, August 9, 2021

Monday CoronaBuzz, August 9, 2021: 71 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Monday CoronaBuzz, August 9, 2021: 71 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 – STATE-SPECIFIC

Wisconsin Department of Health Services: DHS Releases New and Updated Resources for Schools to Keep Students Safe. “To help keep students and teachers safe during the 2021-2022 school year, the Department of Health Services (DHS) today launched a K-12 School Testing Program communications toolkit. This toolkit will support school districts and school administrators’ efforts to connect with school staff, families, and communities about the COVID-19 testing opportunities available to them through the schools participating in this program. DHS has also released an updated version of the Guidelines for the Prevention, Investigation, and Control of COVID-19 Outbreaks in K-12 Schools in Wisconsin, a resource for school administrators and local and tribal health departments to use as they work together to make decisions about layered prevention strategies and to prevent and control COVID-19 outbreaks.”

USEFUL STUFF

WRAL: What to do if you lose your vaccination card. “So you got vaccinated against the coronavirus — but, you lost your COVID-19 vaccination card and you can’t prove it to anyone. Now what? Experts say you should protect the card like it’s your social security number, but for some of us, accidents happen.”

UPDATES

Tampa Bay Times: Florida adds 134,506 coronavirus cases, 616 deaths in the past week.. “Florida officials reported 134,506 coronavirus cases over the seven-day period from July 30 to Aug 5. At more than 19,000 infections per day, it’s the state’s highest infection rate since the start of the pandemic. The latest tally brings the total number of cases up to 2,725,450 since the pandemic’s first two cases in Florida were reported 17 months ago on March 1, 2020.”

Dallas Morning News: Dallas County adds 830 more coronavirus cases, says only 25 ICU beds are available. “Dallas County reported four more COVID-19 deaths and 830 new coronavirus cases Friday. Meanwhile, Tarrant County added 929 more cases, pushing the combined case total for Dallas and Tarrant counties above 600,000 for the pandemic.”

Miami Herald: Florida COVID update: Record-breaking 23,903 new cases, more people than ever in hospital . “On Saturday, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 23,903 new COVID-19 cases for Friday. The day before was another record-breaker: 22,783 new novel coronavirus cases. Saturday’s data amounts to the highest single-day case count since the pandemic began last year as the state continues record-breaking hospitalizations for the sixth straight day in a row.”

NBC New York: US Now Averaging 100,000 New COVID-19 Infections a Day. “The U.S. is now averaging 100,000 new COVID-19 infections a day, returning to a milestone last seen during the winter surge in another bleak reminder of how quickly the delta variant has spread through the country.”

Florida Politics: COVID-19 patients continue to fill Florida hospitals. “Florida’s count of COVID-19 patients in hospitals rose to another record, filling 13,435 beds, the Florida Hospital Association says. That record day, reported Sunday by Florida officials to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and then publicly shared through a tweet by the Florida Hospital Association, now is well above any count seen before this summer of Florida hospital beds filled with COVID-19 patients.”

MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

Daily Beast: Pharmacists Fight Off COVID Truthers Demanding Horse Medicine Instead of the Jab. “Devotees have besieged pharmacists with prescriptions from shady online prescribers, forcing pharmacies to crack down and treat the antiparasitic drugs like opioids. As human-approved ivermectin prescriptions have been harder to come by, enthusiasts have taken to raiding rural tractor supply stores in search of ivermectin horse paste (packed with ‘apple flavor!’) and weighed the benefits of taking ivermectin ‘sheep drench’ and a noromectin ‘injection for swine and cattle.'”

The Verge: Report finds Doximity, a social network for doctors, is riddled with anti-vaccine comments. “A social media site for doctors is seeing “hundreds of comments”— many with false claims and conspiracy theories— on posts about the COVID-19 vaccine and the pandemic, according to a new report from CNBC. Doximity is limited to healthcare professionals in the US— it verifies members before they can join— and no one who posts to the site is anonymous.”

Orlando Sentinel: PolitiFact: DeSantis claim that COVID rise is due to illegal border crossings is ‘False’. “Immigrants and president Biden’s border policies are not to blame for the rise in COVID cases in Florida and elsewhere, the non-partisan fact-checking website PolitiFact determined Friday, despite claims to that effect by Gov. Ron DeSantis.”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

Washington Post: ‘We’re back to panicking’: Moms are hit hardest with camps, day cares and schools closing again. “Panic is setting in among America’s 46 million parents of children under 12 as plans for in-person day care and schooling are getting disrupted yet again from the rise of the highly transmissible delta variant of the coronavirus. While children do not tend to face the worst complications from the virus, they do get sick and spread the virus, which can close down camps, school and day care for weeks. All of this is happening just as many employers are demanding workers return to the office. When children have to stay home, the burden typically falls on moms.”

BuzzFeed News: Friendships Are Breaking Up Over Vaccines. “BuzzFeed News asked readers to share how they’re dealing with unvaccinated friends. We received hundreds of responses that detailed a range of experiences, from people ending friendships altogether to choosing to uninvite loved ones from weddings and parties. But more than anything, we heard stories of frustration and sadness, revealing how COVID-19 has transformed not just the country, but our social structures, too.”

Bloomberg Law: Florida’s Oxygen Woes Cue Coming Wave of Covid Supply Shortages. “Health centers in the state are grappling with shortages of drivers who can transport oxygen, a critical resource for hospitalized Covid-19 patients, and restrictions on how long they can be on the road. Industry professionals expect similar obstacles to expand around the U.S. for other essential supplies.”

Washington Post: Masks, comfortable clothes likely to linger after pandemic, Post-Schar School polling finds. “Two-thirds of Americans say that once the coronavirus pandemic ends, they plan to put on masks when sick and wear comfortable clothes more often than before, according to a Washington Post-Schar School poll that points to enduring cultural shifts the public health crisis may bring about.”

Core 77: A Look at Face Mask Dispensers. “Many who regularly wear facemasks have opted for permanent cloth ones, rather than the disposable kind. Healthcare professionals have no such option, so hospitals are stocked with disposable facemasks (when they’re in stock). That means facemask dispensers are needed A perusal of medical supply websites shows that these have received a minimum of design attention, and their doesn’t appear to be any standard (nor standout) design.”

Mashable: Was COVID the death of the college Facebook meme group?. “Because students missed out on community-building experiences at school, such as attending football games, studying in the library, and seeing the same eccentric characters on campus everyday, meme pages suffered a content drought. Come mid-August students will head back to their universities after extended time away, but can the campus meme pages be revived?”

ScienceBlog: Mountain Lions Moved Less, Downsized Territory During LA’s Pandemic Shutdown. “As people sheltered in place at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, sightings of wildlife in urban areas helped spawn a meme, ‘Nature is healing,’ that reflected an intuitive belief: Carnivores were stretching their legs, and their ranges, by expanding into long-lost territory. But new research from the University of Nebraska–Lincoln and National Park Service shows that mountain lions in Greater Los Angeles, when briefly spared the proximity of people, instead responded with an economy of movement that also reveals the costs of living near them.”

ACTIVISM / PROTESTS

WEAR: Group of NWFL hospital employees protest against vaccine policy. “A protest was held by some Ascension Sacred Heart employees Friday afternoon speaking out against a new policy that will require all employees to be vaccinated. Holding signs in solidarity, dozens of employees from Ascension Sacred Heart gathered in front of the hospital Friday.”

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

Washington Post: As breakthrough covid infections rise, nursing home chains require that staffers be vaccinated. “As the threat of the delta variant grows, other large nursing home chains also are beginning to adopt vaccine mandates, including the largest for-profit chain, Genesis HealthCare, which is requiring employees to get their first vaccine shot by Aug. 23. Massachusetts said Wednesday that it is imposing a state vaccine mandate on nursing home staffers. These moves are part of a building wave of requirements in health-care settings nationally.”

KTLA: California order will limit hospital visitors to vaccinated or those with a negative COVID-19 test. “Visitors to any of California’s hospitals will only be allowed access if they are vaccinated against COVID-19, or provide evidence of a negative COVID-19 test, according to an order about to come into effect by the California Department of Public Health.”

AP: Some in US getting COVID-19 boosters without FDA approval. “The U.S. government has not approved booster shots against the virus, saying it has yet to see evidence they are necessary. But [Gina] Welch and an untold number of other Americans have managed to get them by taking advantage of the nation’s vaccine surplus and loose tracking of those who have been fully vaccinated.”

Gainesville Sun: Gainesville area hospitals postpone some surgeries, ambulances in short supply. “Gainesville area hospitals are postponing elective surgeries and taking other steps to cope with an onslaught of new COVID-19 patients who are filling up hospital beds and putting a strain on staff and resources, officials said. Many of those being admitted to Alachua County hospitals for COVID treatment are coming from outlying counties where medical facilities are full and the vaccination rates are lower than Alachua County, officials said. ”

ABC 8: Two North Texas hospitals close ERs, shift staff to address COVID patient surge. “Two North Texas hospital groups are shifting staff to address the growing number of COVID cases in the area. Hunt Regional Healthcare released a statement late Friday that its Commerce Emergency Room site will be temporarily closed. Texas Health has also released a statement that its North Rockwall ER will be closed, so they can shift staff to the main hospital.”

INSTITUTIONS

News4Jax: In 10 days, 6 members of Jacksonville church die from COVID-19, pastor says. “A Jacksonville church pastor said in the last 10 days, six of his church members have died from COVID-19, and more of their members are currently in the hospital. Now the church is pushing to get as many people vaccinated as possible.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

Washington Post: United Airlines becomes first carrier to mandate vaccine for U.S.-based employees. “United Airlines will require employees to be vaccinated against the coronavirus, the company announced Friday, becoming the first domestic airline to require the vaccine as a condition of employment. The company’s mandate will apply to all 67,000 of its active, U.S.-based employees, the company said.”

The Lily: More places are requiring proof of vaccination. LGBTQ bars led the way.. “As the delta variant surges, a wave of LGBTQ bars across the country have been similarly prescient in their policies, requiring proof of vaccination for entry before or just after their cities implemented mask mandates and other precautions to curb the spread of the virus. LGBTQ people characterize the bars’ vaccine precautions as part of a legacy of activism to protect the health of LGBTQ people, adding that the requirements are also indicative of the important roles LGBTQ bars play as safe spaces within the communities they serve.”

Route Fifty: Public and Private Sector Jobs Are Increasing Despite Covid Surge. “The U.S. added close to a million jobs in July, including 221,000 in local government. But much of that data is likely skewed by pandemic fluctuations, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.”

WORLD / FEDERAL GOVERNMENT

Washington Post: Coronavirus booster shots for the immunocompromised expected to be authorized soon. “Federal health officials are racing to ensure that millions of Americans with weakened immune systems can get additional shots of coronavirus vaccines to protect them against the highly contagious delta variant. The actions could mean the extra shots would be authorized in days or weeks, according to federal officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the plan has not been announced.”

CNN: Biden administration rolls out ‘final extension’ on student loan repayment pause. “President Joe Biden’s administration extended its pause on student loan repayment, interest and collections until Jan. 31, 2022, the US Department of Education said Friday in a press release. The department called it a ‘final extension,’ saying it ‘believes this additional time and a definitive end date will allow borrowers to plan for the resumption of payments and reduce the risk of delinquency and defaults after restart.’ ”

CNBC: Pandemic-era relief is drying up. But families still have options. “Stimulus checks, more generous jobless benefits, expanded money to feed children and other aid and protections kept the worst at bay in many households, and made life more tolerable during a particularly dark period. The fact that so many Americans lived paycheck-to-paycheck before the pandemic made the relief all the more necessary. Now much of that help is drying up. Here’s what you need to know about the expiration of the programs, and what aid will still be available to you.”

ABC News: Vaccine mandates would make a difference: NIH director. “National Institutes of Health Director Dr. Francis Collins said Sunday he believes vaccine requirements could make a difference in slowing the rapid spread of COVID-19 and acknowledged how politics has polarized public opinion on pandemic mitigation strategies.”

STATE GOVERNMENT

The Advocate: How Jeff Landry’s efforts to undermine COVID prevention set him apart from fellow Republicans. “Amid often strong disagreements among Republicans at the local and national level over how best to respond to a deadly and crippling pandemic, Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry has rarely wavered in his skepticism. Nearly since the beginning, he has publicly challenged the advice of medical experts, whether the subject was the efficacy of hydroxychloroquine, the necessity of masks or the risks of the vaccine.”

New York Times: New Jersey’s governor orders schools to use masks.. “Gov. Philip D. Murphy of New Jersey announced on Friday that in the face of the spreading, highly contagious Delta variant, all students, teachers, staff members and visitors would have to wear masks inside of school buildings when public schools open in a few weeks.”

Click Orlando: Gov. Ron DeSantis objects to vaccine mandates at Florida hospitals. “Gov. Ron DeSantis didn’t want Florida businesses to require customers to show proof of COVID-19 vaccinations to get served or to enter establishments, so he swayed lawmakers this spring to pass legislation banning ‘vaccine passports.’ Now, the governor says he also doesn’t support hospitals requiring their staff members to get vaccinated.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

San Francisco Chronicle: S.F. sheriff’s deputies threaten resignations over city’s vaccination mandate . “The San Francisco Sheriff’s Department will see a wave of resignations if the city enforces its policy requiring vaccinations for its employees, according to the Deputy Sheriff’s Association, the union representing sheriff’s deputies.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

CNN: South Carolina Republican congressman tests positive for Covid-19. “Rep. Ralph Norman has tested positive for Covid-19 after experiencing mild symptoms, the South Carolina Republican, who is fully vaccinated, announced Thursday in a statement.”

KRCG: Ashland State Representative Sara Walsh contracts COVID-19: Chose not to vaccinate. “Missouri State Representative Sara Walsh of Ashland said Thursday she and her husband Steve contracted the coronavirus. Sara Walsh was home recovering while her husband was in a hospital bed on a ventilator fighting his life. The couple chose not to get a COVID-19 vaccination.”

Raw Story: Family ‘devastated’ after n​ight club owner who railed against vaccines dies of COVID-19. “David Parker, 56, passed away at Darlington Memorial Hospital in County Durham on Monday. According to the Daily Mail, he had no underlying medical conditions. His COVID diagnosis came just weeks after he posted numerous messages slamming vaccines.”

KSHB: Rep. Sharice Davids says she has COVID-19; is in quarantine “U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids (D – Kansas) announced Friday she has tested positive for COVID-19. Davids, who represents portions of Johnson and Wyandotte Counties on the Kansas side of the metro area, said in a release that she is experiencing only mild symptoms, adding that things could have been ‘much worse’ had she not previously taken the vaccine.”

Re/New Houston: A Houston restaurant owner says he was brainwashed into not trusting the vaccine. Then he got COVID.. “[Andres Perekalski] believes the internet ‘brainwashed’ him into thinking the shots contained a government-regulated chip or that they would cause premature death. Though he had family members and multiple employees at his restaurant, Argentina Cafe Empanada Factory contract the virus last year, Perekalski thought his immune system would be able to fight it with few complications. After all, he’s relatively young and healthy — a former professional soccer player who played in Argentina, Mexico and Asia.”

WPTV: Vocal anti-vaccine broadcaster dies from COVID-19 complications. “Former South Florida talk show host Dick Farrel, known and beloved by fans for his over-the-top right-wing opinions, has died from complications from COVID-19. On Facebook, Farrel advocated against getting the coronavirus vaccine and was skeptical of Dr. Anthony Fauci, Chief of the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, and his recommendations concerning the coronavirus. Friends said after contracting the virus he changed his point of view.”

ABC News: Funeral of man who died of COVID-19 is turned into vaccine and testing event. “A Florida man’s last wish before dying of COVID-19 was to get the vaccine. To honor his memory, his family is turning his funeral into a vaccine and testing event to protect the community against the deadly virus. Marquis Davis, a 28-year-old business owner and father, died on July 26 from COVID-19. He was not vaccinated at the time.”

WSB-TV: ‘They’re all gone’: Florida woman loses fiancé, mother and grandma in 5 days to COVID-19. “Tiffany Devereaux and her family live in the Jacksonville area about 30 minutes south of the Georgia/Florida border. Devereaux lost her grandmother last Saturday, her fiancée last Monday and her mother last Wednesday.”

News4Jax: Duval County Property Appraiser Jerry Holland, wife hospitalized with COVID-19. “Duval County Property Appraiser Jerry Holland and his wife, Beverly, have been hospitalized with COVID-19, Holland confirmed to News4Jax. Holland said he might be able to go home Sunday but that his wife is not doing as well and is currently on 60 liters of oxygen.”

Cochrane Times-Post: Charities hoarded cash and failed to address crises during COVID: Report. “Canadian charities responded to the pandemic by hoarding cash and relying on government support, and most failed to pivot to address crises caused by COVID-19 and economic measures taken to control the spread of the virus, according to a comprehensive report by The Veritas Foundation.”

SPORTS

Axios: More than two dozen athletes test positive for COVID-19 at Tokyo Olympics. “The worst fears may not have been realized, but COVID still had an impact on the Olympics despite the protocols — and Tokyo had an even bigger spike of virus cases outside the Games.”

K-12 EDUCATION

WREG: Marion, Arkansas school superintendent says more than 830 now under quarantine. “More than 700 people in the Marion School District are quarantined, with 43 positive cases of COVID-19, the district’s superintendent told state leaders Wednesday. Superintendent Glen Fenter said 730 were quarantined as of the morning, and that number was rising. None were hospitalized, he said.” The quote does not match the headline because the district quarantined another 100 people overnight.

KCRA: Thousands of COVID-19 safety complaints by teachers, parents being ignored by state. Here’s why. “Are COVID-19 safety complaints made by teachers and parents being ignored by the state of California? It’s a question being asked as educators and students are set to return to classrooms as the delta variant of COVID-19 continues to surge. Michael Ferguson, an attorney and educator, is one of the people raising this question.”

ABC News: Florida’s largest school districts impose mask mandates, but some students can opt out. “This weekend, some of Florida’s largest school districts have moved to require masks for students, the latest in a weeklong saga that began when Gov. Ron DeSantis issued an executive order aimed at preventing districts from mandating face coverings for kids.”

WRAL: 55 COVID cases tied to NC charter school with no mask mandate, quarantine . “The Brunswick County Heath Department ordered a local charter school to follow COVID-19 quarantine and health requirements after 55 COVID-19 cases were tied to the school. Against recommendation from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and prevention and the state, Leland Charter Day School does not require masks.”

Houston Chronicle: As school starts, Houston-area parents panic over raging delta variant and limited mask guidance. “With the school year set to kick off as early as this week in some districts, [Carissa] Baldwin-McGinnis is one of many parents across the Houston region expressing a mix of frustration, confusion and anxiety as they prepare to send their children back to classes amid a surge of COVID-19 infections that is straining area hospitals and prompting alarm once again from local officials.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

New York Post: University of Florida requires masks indoors — even for vaccinated. “University of Florida students and staffers are ‘expected’ to mask up indoors at all times – even if they’re fully vaccinated. The school announced its decision Friday, urging people to get vaccinated as cases of the coronavirus soar in the Sunshine State and elsewhere because of the Delta variant.”

HEALTH

NBC Bay Area: Cats and Dogs Top List of COVID-19 Infected Animals in U.S.. “Tests show more than 40% of infected animals in the U.S. are cats and about 36% are dogs. As COVID-19 infects animal populations across the world, veterinarians search for clues about how the virus impacts different animals and which animals might spread infection back to humans.”

Citizen Times: Inside North Carolina’s ‘little Dare County,’ most vaccinated county in the rural South. “Isolation is one of the biggest draws of Dare County, a nearly 110-mile strip of islands off the North Carolina coast. But the beachy, Outer Banks community has also separated itself from the mainland when it comes to COVID-19 vaccination rates. Dare County has the highest vaccination rate (59%) of any rural Southern county, according to CDC data released August 1.”

The Atlantic: The Best Way to Keep Your Kids Safe From Delta. “The number of kids contracting the coronavirus is rising. In the week that ended with July 29, more than 70,000 children got COVID-19, representing nearly a fifth of all cases. Though a vanishingly small number of kids have died of the disease—358 since the start of the pandemic, as of July 29—some states, like Florida, now have dozens of children hospitalized. Few parents want to hear that their little ones may get COVID-19, no matter how low their odds of death.”

CNN: What changes the unvaccinated minds? Fear.. “The Covid-19 vaccines work to greatly lessen the chance of a person getting a symptomatic case, getting hospitalized or dying. Yet nearly a third of eligible Americans haven’t gotten a single dose and more than 40% have not been fully vaccinated. So what does work to get more people to take the vaccine? One answer seems clear in the polling and in the real world: fear. Fear of getting the virus and of losing freedoms looks like it motivates people to get vaccinated.”

New York Times: ‘This Is Really Scary’: Kids Struggle With Long Covid. “Studies estimate long Covid may affect between 10 percent and 30 percent of adults infected with the coronavirus. Estimates from the handful of studies of children so far range widely. At an April congressional hearing, Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, cited one study suggesting that between 11 percent and 15 percent of infected youths might ‘end up with this long-term consequence, which can be pretty devastating in terms of things like school performance.'”

NBC News: Kids sick with Covid are filling up children’s hospitals in areas seeing spikes. “As vaccination rates lag and the new delta variant surges, Covid infection rates among kids have risen and children’s hospitals are seeing a spike in medical care needs among the young patients.”

RESEARCH

PsyPost: New study suggests people turned to music to cope with psychological and emotional challenges during the COVID-19 pandemic. “A study published in Psychology of Music suggests that people adjusted their music listening habits as a way of coping with the COVID-19 crisis. Israeli survey respondents reported that they increased their music listening during the initial lockdown and that they used music to help them cope with emotional challenges during the pandemic.” 90% of the music I’m listening to now is not the music I was listening to at the start of the pandemic or even music I had heard before.

New York Times: New data suggest J. & J. vaccine works against Delta and recipients don’t need a booster shot.. “A single dose of the Covid-19 vaccine made by Johnson & Johnson is highly effective in preventing severe illness and death from the Delta and Beta variants of the coronavirus, data from a clinical trial in South Africa suggest.”

Sky News: COVID-19 variants could be named after constellations once Greek alphabet is used up, WHO official says. “Maria Van Kerkhove, the World Health Organisation’s COVID-19 technical lead, confirmed the agency is considering naming new COVID-19 strains after star constellations. She also warned new variants could emerge which evade vaccines.”

ScienceBlog: New Device Can Diagnose Covid-19 From Saliva Samples. “Engineers at MIT and Harvard University have designed a small tabletop device that can detect SARS-CoV-2 from a saliva sample in about an hour. In a new study, they showed that the diagnostic is just as accurate as the PCR tests now used.”

OUTBREAKS

Rolling Stone: Covid Outbreaks Tied to Music Festivals Raise Outdoor Transmission Concerns. “Officials in Michigan say at least 96 cases can be traced to the Faster Horses Festival, which took place in Brooklyn, Michigan, from July 16th to 18th, while authorities in Oregon are looking at 62 cases tied to July 10th’s Pendleton Whisky Music Fest in Pendleton, Oregon. In Michigan, one person considered a ‘secondary case’ — infected by someone who contracted Covid at Faster Horses — is hospitalized. Neither event required attendees to be vaccinated.”

CRIME / SECURITY / LEGAL

CNN: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ order on masks in schools faces its first legal challenge over constitutionality. “Eight Florida attorneys have filed a lawsuit against Gov. Ron DeSantis over his executive order on masks in schools, said Charles Gallagher, an attorney working on the suit. This is the first legal challenge over the constitutionality of the governor’s order on masks, Gallagher said.”

ABC 7: Gov. Newsom stands firm on school mask mandate in face of OC lawsuit. “Gov. Gavin Newsom stood his ground on the state’s mask mandate for students in schools as he faces a lawsuit from the O.C. Board of Education, whom he described as heading in the same direction as states like Florida. The board is suing Newsom, claiming his mandate requiring all students K -12 to wear masks indoors is a burden on children.” I promise I did not plan for these two articles to be next to each other.

WSVN: Norwegian cruises challenges Florida passenger vaccine law. “Norwegian Cruise Line asked a federal judge Friday to block a Florida law prohibiting cruise companies from demanding that passengers show written proof of coronavirus vaccination before they board a ship.”

ABC 6: Judge blocks Arkansas law barring mask mandates in schools. “An Arkansas judge on Friday temporarily blocked the state from enforcing its ban on mask mandates after lawmakers left the prohibition in place despite a rising number of COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations.”

OPINION

CNN: DeSantis’ cynical move on Covid-19. “Florida is once again under siege from Covid-19, at the epicenter of a fourth wave. One in five new cases nationally have been reported in the state — virtually all spurred by the highly contagious Delta strain. If you were governor, you probably would recognize the threat and think it your duty to work day and night to ensure that every single resident who is eligible gets the vaccinations that can save their lives. You would think it. But not Ron DeSantis.”

POLITICS

BusinessWire: New Stanford Study Shows Promotion of COVID-19 Vaccines by Leading Republicans Can Influence Vaccine Intentions Among Supporters (PRESS RELEASE). “Unvaccinated Republicans who were presented with the Republican elite endorsements reported 7.0% higher vaccination intentions than those who viewed the Democratic elite endorsement and 5.7% higher than those in the neutral control condition. Moreover, the study found that participants presented with endorsements from Republican leaders were more likely to report that they thought Trump and other Republicans would want them to get vaccinated, thereby influencing their vaccine intentions. On the other hand, vaccinated and unvaccinated Republicans who viewed pro-vaccine content from Democratic leaders expressed more negative attitudes toward the vaccine and reported being less willing to recommend vaccination to family and friends.”

Washington Post: Mayor Bowser’s poor spin about not following her own mask mandate. “The mayor is in hot water because an opinion writer at the Washington Examiner reported that she violated her own mask order while attending a reception after a wedding at which she officiated. The mayor and her office have responded with spin and obfuscation — what we in the news business call a non-denial denial. In the process, she seems to have recast the meaning of the executive order that went into effect on the day of the wedding. Let’s explore.”

AP: DeSantis feuds with Biden White House as COVID cases rise. “Florida has repeatedly broken records for hospitalized patients this week, and it and Texas accounted for a third of all new cases nationwide last week, according to the White House. DeSantis has responded by banning mask mandates in schools and arguing that vaccines are the best way to fight the virus while new restrictions amount to impediments on liberty.”

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August 9, 2021 at 08:09PM
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Good Neighbor Council, Storm Surges, ISS Missions, More: Monday ResearchBuzz, August 9, 2021

Good Neighbor Council, Storm Surges, ISS Missions, More: Monday ResearchBuzz, August 9, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

State Archives of North Carolina: Good Neighbor Council Digital Collection. “On January 18, 1963, Governor Terry Sanford established the Good Neighbor Council. The council consisted of 24 citizens appointed by the governor. David S. Coltrane served as the first Chairman and Executive Director until his death in 1968. The two main missions of the council were to encourage the employment of qualified people without regard to race, and to urge youth to become better trained for employment.”

University of Central Florida: UCF Researchers Create Global Storm Surge Database. “The researchers also visualized the data by creating an online map that displays 802 tide gauges from around the world and all relevant data corresponding to each tide gauge covering the entire 1900s and most of the 1800s. Users can click on the tide gauge and download multiple daily maximum surge datasets.”

EVENTS

Digital Trends: How to watch Northrop Grumman launch its 16th cargo mission to the ISS this week. “This Tuesday, August 10, an uncrewed Cygnus spacecraft will be launched on a resupply mission to the International Space Station (ISS), packed with scientific research and supplies for the crew. NASA will be streaming the launch of the craft so you can watch along live at home, and we’ve got all the details.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

New Zealand Herald: Saints be praised: Social media giant Facebook rolls out a prayer tool. “The social media giant has rolled out a new prayer request feature, a tool embraced by some religious leaders as a cutting-edge way to engage the faithful online. Others are eyeing it warily as they weigh its usefulness against the privacy and security concerns they have with Facebook.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Calvert Journal: Follow @theneweastisqueer, the account celebrating past and present LGBTQ+ creatives from Eastern Europe. “The platform was created to show that ‘the New East is, and has always been, queer,’ through interviews and profiles of figures from a mix of generations. The artists featured include Lulla La Polaca, a Polish 82-year-old drag queen, and Admina, a non-binary techno artist and DJ who has been storming Romania’s clubbing scene.”

The Orange Leader: USM Professor, Students Conduct Examination of Historic Louisiana Cemetery. “A geography professor at The University of Southern Mississippi (USM) Gulf Park in Long Beach and six of his students are engaged in a project collecting information about a historic Louisiana city cemetery, using the latest technology featuring geographic information systems (GIS) and ground penetrating radar (GPR).”

Caracas Chronicles: How to Navigate Twitterzuela. “…in 2011, a report by Comscore showed that Venezuela held the fifth highest Twitter penetration rate in the world. In a month, 21% of internet users in Venezuela passed through the Twitter website. As the crisis in Venezuela developed, this early adoption was combined with multiple historical and political factors.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

NPR: Your Facebook Account Was Hacked. Getting Help May Take Weeks — Or $299. “In July, NPR received 19 emails from listeners complaining that their Facebook accounts had been hacked or disabled. People share similar tales of woe on Reddit forums and Twitter every day. Some became so desperate that they shelled out hundreds of dollars to buy a virtual reality headset in an attempt to get Facebook to restore their accounts.”

InfoSecurity Magazine: #DEFCON: A Bad eBook Can Take Over Your Kindle (or Worse). “The primary purpose of the Kindle is to enable users to read books. Slava Makkaveev, security researcher at Check Point Software Technologies, had another idea, though; he wanted to see if he could load a book that would exploit the Kindle. At the DEF CON 29 conference, Makkaveev outlined the process by which he was able to exploit a Kindle with a malicious eBook that he was able to create.”

Wired: All the Ways Spotify Tracks You—and How to Stop It . “Of Spotify’s 365 million monthly users, 165 million of them subscribe to not listen to ads. The other 200 million put up with them. So how much does Spotify really know, and how can you limit its data collection?”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Science: Major U.K. science funder to require grantees to make papers immediately free to all. “The United Kingdom currently has one of the highest rates of open-access publication in the world, with many researchers posting their research papers on websites that make them publicly available for free. But the country’s leading funding agency today announced a new policy that will push open access even further by mandating that all research it funds must be freely available for anyone to read upon publication.”

New York Times: YouTube Is Underwhelming. “It’s hard to imagine the internet without YouTube. Buying the video site in its relative infancy was one of the smartest things Google ever did. But after nearly 15 years of being part of Google, the most successful money machine in internet history, it’s still not clear that YouTube has fulfilled its financial potential both for itself and everyone involved in its vast digital economy.” Good morning, Internet…

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August 9, 2021 at 05:32PM
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Sunday, August 8, 2021

Google Play, Google Hangouts, TikTok Beauty Filters, More: Sunday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 8, 2021

Google Play, Google Hangouts, TikTok Beauty Filters, More: Sunday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 8, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Wired: What You Should Know About the Google Play Store Changes. “GOOGLE IS INTRODUCING a major shift in the way that apps work on Android—and while the changes might not be too noticeable to consumers, it’s important to be aware of what’s happening and why, if you’re a user of Google’s mobile operating system.”

Gizmodo: Google Is Signing Out Free Hangouts Users on Mobile, Gets Closer to Finally Killing the Thing . “It’s been nearly an entire year since we started talking about how Google Hangouts was officially set to disappear. Since then, it seems like we’ve been repeating the same thing every few months, only for Hangouts to stubbornly persist living. If apps could talk, Hangouts would probably declare, ‘what is dead may never die.’ However, Google on Friday took one more slow step toward shutting off the lights at Hangouts for good.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Mashable: TikTok beauty filters can be super realistic—unless you’re a person of color . “When I first came across the Glow Look filter on TikTok, I dragged my self-absorbed ass into the video maker to try it on. I was expecting to be wowed by my own hotness, just like all the other girls on my For You Page. Instead, I tapped the filter on, and immediately guffawed. It looked ridiculous, to say the least. The enlarged, bright blue eyes, flushed cheeks, and noticeably thinner nose looked extremely out of place on my Vietnamese face.”

PC Magazine: Virtual Clothing: A Waste of Money or a Way to Save the Planet in Style?. “A Gucci bag going for several thousand dollars is not news. But a Gucci bag that you can only wear in the metaverse going for more than its IRL counterpart is certainly eye-catching.”

Stylist: Archaeology is trending on TikTok – here’s how to make it your new hobby . “From verified accounts that share videos about new finds and favourite artefacts, to videos of people metal detecting and a plethora of hilarious archaeology-themed memes, it seems plenty of students, academics and eager hobbyists are finding that #archaeologytiktok is a great space to share their enthusiasm for digging up old stuff and working out what it can tell us about the history of humankind.” An interesting, informative article saddled with an absolutely wretched headline.

SECURITY & LEGAL

Bleeping Computer: Actively exploited bug bypasses authentication on millions of routers. “Threat actors actively exploit a critical authentication bypass vulnerability impacting home routers with Arcadyan firmware to take them over and deploy Mirai botnet malicious payloads. The vulnerability tracked as CVE-2021-20090 is a critical path traversal vulnerability (rated 9.9/10) in the web interfaces of routers with Arcadyan firmware that could allow unauthenticated remote attackers to bypass authentication.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Fast Company: This is where hateful trolls go after they are banned from mainstream social media. “Ever wonder what happens to Twitter or Facebook users after they’re thrown out for hate speech? A team of researchers from Germany, the U.K., and the United States found out. Their research process was creative: They gathered 29 million posts from Gab, a right-wing platform known for its neo-Nazis, conspiracy theorists, and anti-Semitism, and then backtracked to find users’ other profiles on Twitter or Reddit, some of which had been suspended.”

Times of Israel: New Google project in Israel aims to use AI to help detect colon cancer. “Google’s Verily Life Sciences has said it will open a research and development center in Israel that will focus on applying artificial intelligence technology to biomedical problems. The R&D center will move forward with research conducted by Google Health and the Shaare Zedek Medical Center in Jerusalem, Verily said on Thursday.”

dot LA: Venture Cash Is Pouring Into AI that Can Diagnose Diseases. Doctors Aren’t Sure They Can Trust It.. “Beyond its most promising attributes, AI-driven technology could also dramatically decrease wait times at hospitals and doctors’ offices by automating some of the most tedious work, allowing doctors to see and treat more patients. But critics of the unregulated technology say results can be inconsistent.”

OTHER STUFF I THINK IS COOL

Digital Trends: Frantic Fanfic is a party game about writing terrible fan faction Typo in headline. “…at its most basic, Frantic Fanfic allows a group of friends to each write down character names that will then be shuffled around, names will be chosen by the group, and then each player will be prompted to write a different section of several fan fictions using the chosen characters under a time limit. Once every section of each fan fiction has been written, the group will then be prompted to read each out loud.” Good evening, Internet…

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August 9, 2021 at 05:42AM
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Livestreamer Music, Google, Facebook, More: Sunday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 8, 2021

Livestreamer Music, Google, Facebook, More: Sunday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 8, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

USEFUL STUFF

Lifehacker: How to Play Music on Your Livestream Without Getting Banned. “Machine learning has helped solve many of our biggest tech-related problems, and now it can help you find and create auto-generating, royalty-free music to play on your videos and livestreams so you won’t get hit with a copyright violation.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

BBC: Larry Page: Google co-founder granted New Zealand residency. “Larry Page, Google’s co-founder and one of the world’s richest men, has been granted New Zealand residency under a category for wealthy investors. Applicants are required to invest at least NZ$10m ($7m, £5m) in New Zealand over three years. Mr Page entered New Zealand in January, when its borders were still closed because of Covid-19.”

Bloomberg: The Woman Who Did Facebook’s Racial Audit Is About to Be Really Busy. “[Laura] Murphy spent most of her career navigating politics and policy, but recently she’s taken her talent to the corporate world, moderating conflicts between companies and advocates who criticize their impact on racial and social justice. She’s emerged as a pioneer of the corporate civil rights audit, a new tool for getting companies to confront their role in perpetuating racial disparities.”

New York Times: Oil producers used Facebook to counter President Biden’s clean energy message, a study shows.. “Soon after Joseph R. Biden Jr., then a presidential candidate, released his $2 trillion climate plan last year that promised to escalate the use of clean energy in the United States, the world’s major oil and gas dialed up their presence on Facebook. Overnight on Facebook’s U.S. platforms, 25 of the biggest oil and gas producers, industry lobby groups and advocacy organizations unleashed a surge in ads promoting fossil fuels, according to ad spending data analyzed by InfluenceMap, a London-based watchdog that tracks corporate influence on climate policy.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Wired: AI Wrote Better Phishing Emails Than Humans in a Recent Test. “NATURAL LANGUAGE PROCESSING continues to find its way into unexpected corners. This time, it’s phishing emails. In a small study, researchers found that they could use the deep learning language model GPT-3, along with other AI-as-a-service platforms, to significantly lower the barrier to entry for crafting spearphishing campaigns at a massive scale.”

Bleeping Computer: Microsoft Edge just got a ‘Super Duper Secure Mode’ upgrade. “Microsoft has announced that the Edge Vulnerability Research team is experimenting with a new feature dubbed ‘Super Duper Secure Mode’ and designed to bring security improvements without significant performance losses. When enabled, the new Microsoft Edge Super Duper Secure Mode will remove Just-In-Time Compilation (JIT) from the V8 processing pipeline, reducing the attack surface threat actors can use to hack into Edge users’ systems.”

The Verge: Apple places female engineering program manager on administrative leave after tweeting about sexism in the office. “Apple has placed senior engineering program manager Ashley Gjøvik on indefinite administrative leave after she tweeted about sexism in the office. The company is currently investigating claims Gjøvik made about a hostile work environment.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Daring Fireball: Apple’s New ‘Child Safety’ Initiatives, and the Slippery Slope. “My first advice is to read Apple’s own high-level description of the features, which ends with links to detailed technical documentation regarding the encryption and techniques Apple is employing in the implementations, and ‘technical assessments’ from three leading researchers in cryptography and computer vision.”

Protocol: Want to succeed on GitHub? Your odds are better if you’re white. . “Software developers with white-sounding names may have more success on GitHub than developers whose names are perceived as Black, Hispanic or Asian-Pacific Islander, according to a recently published study.”

Vietnam Net: Vietnam looks to become AI hub in ASEAN by 2030. “The Vietnamese Government has issued a national strategy on the research, development and application of artificial intelligence (AI) till 2030 with a view to gradually turning Vietnam into an innovation and AI hub in ASEAN and the world.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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August 8, 2021 at 11:43PM
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Facebook, OneNote, VR Fitness, More: Sunday ResearchBuzz, August 8, 2021

Facebook, OneNote, VR Fitness, More: Sunday ResearchBuzz, August 8, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Engadget: Facebook restores policy it ‘lost’ three years ago. “Last month, Facebook’s Oversight Board chastised the company for losing an important policy for three years. At the center of the ruling was an Instagram post about Abdullah Öcalan, which encouraged people to talk about his political imprisonment.”

SlashGear: Microsoft is giving OneNote a fresh design and version tweak. “During the pandemic, many people who never used Microsoft OneNote in their working lives have begun using the application to take notes and to view shared notes from their supervisors in many companies. With the increased popularity of OneNote, Microsoft has taken the time to talk about some changes coming to the application for Windows over the next year. The updates include a major visual refresh for the service.”

USEFUL STUFF

Search Engine Journal: Facebook Video Tips: 15 Ideas for More Engagement. “Creating a message that captivates people is critical. The most crucial factor when it comes to creating engaging Facebook videos is exactly that: engage the user. And you have just seconds to do it. Here are a few methods that can result in greater overall engagement for your Facebook videos.”

Lifehacker: What I’ve Learned About Working Out in VR. “I set out to learn whether virtual reality games can give you a good workout, and last week you heard about a bunch of my favorites. Now that I’ve adventured through the virtual world, I have returned to you with opinions.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Arizona State University: ASU Library awarded $249K digital preservation grant. “Stacey Erdman, digital preservation and curation officer and acting digital repository manager for the ASU Library, will serve as the principal investigator of the three-year grant and manager of the multi-organizational project, which will deliver an innovative digital preservation training program to practicing librarians and archivists struggling to provide ongoing care for their digital collections.”

How-To Geek: The First Website: How the Web Looked 30 Years Ago. “Titled ‘World Wide Web,’ the world’s first public website served as a bare-bones introduction to the concept of the web itself for those outside of CERN who might have been interested in the technology. Amazingly, CERN still hosts a copy of the site that you can view in your modern browser, which reportedly dates to some time in 1992. Sadly, though, the original December 1990 version is lost to history.”

The Drum: China explores restricting social media algorithms to promote ‘culture and art reviews’. “China is looking at how it can limit the role of algorithms in content distribution to align online content with the state’s agenda in order to shape the country’s minds and mainstream views.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Techdirt: Home Depot Tech Will Brick Power Tools If They’re Stolen. What Could Possibly Go Wrong? . “Thanks to internet connectivity, hardware you own can be bricked or downgraded to the point where you lose essential features. Or, just as often, obnoxious DRM means you have to jump through all kinds of bizarre hoops to actually use the thing you thought you owned, whether that’s Keurig using DRM to prevent you from using competing coffee pods, to printer manufacturers using DRM to keep you from buying cheaper cartridges. Now Home Depot is experimenting further with DRM at the point of sale.”

The Verge: Scarlett Johansson’s Black Widow lawsuit has unearthed a huge problem with streaming. “This summer’s biggest Hollywood attraction is a multimillion-dollar battle between two of the industry’s best-known players: Scarlett Johansson and Disney. Johansson sued Disney last week over its day-and-date release of her Marvel superhero film Black Widow, which put the movie on Disney Plus the same day it hit theaters, potentially depriving her of a huge box-office-infused paycheck. The aftermath has been chaotic, but it’s more importantly illuminated the myriad ways that streaming has forever changed the way we experience movies and the implications for the creatives and talent who make them.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Limerick Post: MIC researcher awarded multi-national funding for innovative research into online communications. “MARY Immaculate College (MIC) Applied Linguistics researcher, Dr Anne O’Keeffe, has been awarded significant funding to investigate whether the sudden shift to virtual communications in the workplace has impacted how we communicate.”

The Next Web: Algorithms are providing a way to fairly select citizens’ assemblies. “In the UK and France, for example, citizens’ assemblies have been convened to deliberate responses to climate change. But selecting the members of these bodies is a complicated task. Ideally, citizens’ assemblies should be both representative and randomly selected. Balancing these two requirements is challenging as the volunteers tend to be unrepresentative of the whole population.”

SEO Roundtable: Microsoft Bing Announces Make Every Feature Binary (MEB). “Microsoft announced their next AI model, a large-scale sparse model that complements our production Transformer models, they are calling MEB or ‘Make Every Feature Binary.’ ​Microsoft said this makes the search results on Bing more relevant. In fact, MEB is running in production for 100 percent of Bing searches, in all regions and languages.” Good morning, Internet…

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August 8, 2021 at 05:25PM
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Saturday, August 7, 2021

NASA Perseverance Rover, WhatsApp, Web Crawling, More: Saturday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 7, 2021

NASA Perseverance Rover, WhatsApp, Web Crawling, More: Saturday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 7, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Screen Rant: Track NASA’s Perseverance Rover With This Interactive Map. “For those who want to see exactly where the NASA Perseverance rover has been in its search for life on Mars, NASA has developed an interactive map. One of the many goals of the rover mission is to find ancient life on Mars. To do that, the rover will make quite a long journey across the Jezero Crater, covering different terrains and taking some incredible shots along the way.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Mashable: WhatsApp won’t use Apple’s child abuse image scanner, citing vague privacy fears. “Just because Apple has a plan — and a forthcoming security feature — designed to combat the spread of child sex abuse images, that doesn’t mean everyone’s getting on board. WhatsApp boss Will Cathcart joined the chorus of Apple critics on Friday, stating in no uncertain terms that the Facebook-owned messaging app won’t be adopting this new feature once it launches.”

Search Engine Roundtable: Official Google Crawling Exam. “Google has posted an exam to test your SEO knowledge on crawling. Google said this is to test your knowledge on how Google crawls and indexes websites. This is a true and false test, with explanations on why the answer is right or wrong.”

USEFUL STUFF

The Guardian: Avoiding recipe regret: how to record and revive your family recipes. “If some of your family recipes remain unwritten or are scribbled on scraps of paper, here are some ways to record, revive and preserve them to avoid recipe regret for yourself, and future generations.”

MakeUseOf: How to Set Up Your Own Website in 2 Hours or Less. “About a decade ago, if you wanted to build even the most basic websites, you would have needed to spend lots of hours writing HTML, CSS, and Javascript—or you would have had to pay someone to do it for you. Thankfully, times have changed, and you can have a stunning website up and running in very little time. If you follow all the steps we’ll share with you, you shouldn’t need any more than two hours!” Okay I HATE this lede. I was running a perfectly fine Web site in 1998 – over two decades ago – using Microsoft FrontPage. It was a WYSIWYG editor and my basic HTML skills were only required for doing a little code cleanup (WYSIWYG code was awful back then.) But the rest of the article is quite good. If you ever wanted to create a Web site and needed an article to lay out the general steps you need to take to just go for it, here you go.

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

BBC: How a fake network pushes pro-China propaganda. “A sprawling network of more than 350 fake social media profiles is pushing pro-China narratives and attempting to discredit those seen as opponents of China’s government, according to a new study. The aim is to delegitimise the West and boost China’s influence and image overseas, the report by the Centre for Information Resilience (CIR) suggests.”

CNBC: Google is planning a new Silicon Valley campus with hardware hub, plans show. “Google is planning yet another Silicon Valley campus, which will sit adjacent to a new center partly devoted to hardware, according to preliminary plans obtained by CNBC.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Engadget: Twitter appoints ‘grievance officer’ to obey India’s internet rules. “Twitter is scrambling to reassure India and reclaim its liability protections for user-made content. Bloomberg reports that Twitter has told an Indian court it appointed grievance and nodal officers to honor new rules demanding local full-time staff to handle handle issues like compliance and law enforcement matters.”

CNET: US taps tech giants to help fight ransomware, cyberattacks. “The initiative, called the Joint Cyber Defense Collaborative, was unveiled Thursday by Jen Easterly, director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, which falls under the Department of Homeland Security. The effort, reported earlier by The Wall Street Journal, will initially focus on combating ransomware and developing a framework to deal with cyberattacks that affect providers of cloud services.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Recode: “People do not trust that Facebook is a healthy ecosystem”. “New York University researcher Laura Edelson is at the center of the latest major Facebook controversy over the misinformation that’s eroding our democracy and encouraging Covid-19 vaccine hesitancy. Earlier this week, Facebook abruptly shut down the personal Facebook accounts and research tools of Edelson and two of her colleagues at the NYU Ad Observatory, which studies political advertisements and misinformation on the platform.” Good evening, Internet…

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August 8, 2021 at 05:18AM
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Mobile Broadband, CBP Encounters, Robocalls, More: Saturday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 7, 2021

Mobile Broadband, CBP Encounters, Robocalls, More: Saturday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 7, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Route Fifty: FCC Releases First U.S. Mobile Broadband Map “The Federal Communications Commission released a new map Friday detailing where the nation’s four largest mobile carriers provide voice and data service, part of a broader effort to improve broadband and internet service across the United States. The map shows where Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile US and UScellular offer LTE voice and data coverage, providing a way for consumers to search coverage by a specific address or geographic area.”

CBS News: ACLU arm publishes database tracking fatal encounters with Customs and Border Protection. “The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Texas has identified 177 fatal encounters with U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) personnel dating back to January 2010 – including 34 deaths in custody. A new database launched Friday by the non-profit organization tracks fatal encounters with CBP officials, including U.S. Border Patrol agents.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

PR Newswire: Total Robocalls Decrease by 3% in the First Month of STIR/SHAKEN Release (PRESS RELEASE). “RoboKiller, the app that eliminates 99% of spam calls and text messages, reveals Americans received an estimated 5.74 billion spam calls in July 2021—a 3% decrease from June. Spam text volume also increased to 7.1 billion spam texts for July, a 5% increase from June.”

TechRadar: Google just got a mystery wireless streaming device approved by regulators. “It looks like there’s yet more new hardware on the way from Google: following the unveiling of its revamped Nest smart home gadgets, another ‘wireless streaming device’ has passed through the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in the US.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

The Conversation: Secret history: the release of the Mountbatten archives and the fight to access royal diaries. “An immense trove of the most important royal historical material for decades has quietly been released in the United Kingdom. These are the diaries of Lord Louis Mountbatten and his wife Lady Edwina, from the 1920s until 1968…. But the release of this material doesn’t just shed light on the royal family. It again highlights the significant barriers to accessing our history; specifically, the claimed ‘convention of royal secrecy’ that imposes strict secrecy over royal communications across the Commonwealth nations.”

Cornell Chronicle: History, music, physics harmonize in keyboard project. “Closely allied with the Cornell-based Westfield Center for Historical Keyboard Studies, the leading international organization for historical keyboard studies, the [Cornell Center for Historical Keyboards] brings together scholars and musicians from across the globe for its programs on the long history of keyboard music and instruments, technologies, repertoires and aesthetics – from the baroque organ to the player piano to the Moog synthesizer.”

CNN: Nigeria’s social media comedians are making laughter pay. “In Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country, an emerging crop of young comics are leveraging social media to create video content that makes people laugh — and makes money. What started as a hobby is now turning into a lucrative business opportunity. By leaning on the growing internet access across the continent, these comics are creating characters and skits on TikTok, Instagram, and Twitter that can be sold to brands.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Reporters Without Borders: NSO/Pegasus: 17 journalists from 7 countries join RSF’s complaint in Paris and before the UN. “Seventeen journalists from seven countries who were listed as potential or actual victims of Pegasus spyware have filed complaints with prosecutors in Paris, against NSO Group and all other persons the investigation will identify. Their complaints complement the one Reporters Without Borders (RSF) and two journalists with French and Moroccan dual nationality already filed on 20 July. RSF has also referred their cases to the United Nations.”

Bleeping Computer: Google expects delays in enforcing 2FA for Chrome extension devs. “Google says that enforcing two-step verification on Google accounts of Chrome Web Store developers will take longer than expected. As first announced in June, Google will require all Chrome extension developers to enable 2-Step Verification (aka 2FA, dual-factor authentication, or 2SV) to publish or update their extensions after August 2nd.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Inside Higher Ed: Colleges and Universities Need More Rappers. “The fact is that, although learning another language was not a requirement for my program, it would be useful to require a class on critical composing or listening practices like Writing Rap, The Black Voice or Composing Mixtapes, which I currently teach at the University of Virginia. If more students were exposed to the critical practices that rappers utilize, I know from experience it would foster a more thoroughly engaged student body that is equipped to think through pressing conversations about race, identity, culture, class, art, aesthetics and so on.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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August 8, 2021 at 12:17AM
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