Wednesday, August 11, 2021

Wednesday CoronaBuzz, August 11, 2021: 49 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Wednesday CoronaBuzz, August 11, 2021: 49 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

St. Cloud Times: Minnesota launches new website with breakthrough COVID-19 infection data. “In Minnesota, 99.81% of people fully vaccinated against COVID-19 have not had a breakthrough case of the infection as of July 11, according to a new page on breakthrough infections from the state Department of Health. Among the 2.9 million Minnesotans who had been vaccinated by that date, 5,599 contracted COVID-19, or 0.19%, according to MDH. Of those cases, 514 resulted in hospitalization (0.017% of those vaccinated) and 57 died (0.002% of fully vaccinated people).”

UPDATES

Miami Herald: Florida COVID update: More than 28,000 cases per day over the weekend, another record. “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Monday afternoon released COVID-19 data for the weekend that showed Florida shattering its single-day case record. But by Monday night — the Florida Department of Health disputed those numbers.”

MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

Poynter: Why the COVID-19 survival rate is not over 99%. “The Instagram post misrepresents data from the CDC’s COVID-19 Pandemic Planning Scenarios document published in September 2020. It was created so public health officials who use mathematical models could help hospitals and policymakers react to different levels of severity of the pandemic. The data does not show the likelihood of surviving COVID-19.”

CNN: ‘Ignorance is a virus:’ How local news outlets are reporting on Covid-19 vaccine rejection. “Incomprehensible conspiracy theories, illogical memes, bogus ideas — they all spread face to face and text to text in highly personal ways, and through wickedly viral platforms that spread nonsense from country to country in mere minutes. And we’re all witnessing this spread in near real time due to the most recent Covid-19 surge in parts of the US.”

New York Times: YouTube suspends Rand Paul for a week over a video disputing the effectiveness of masks.. “YouTube on Tuesday removed a video by Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky for the second time and suspended him from publishing for a week after he posted a video that disputed the effectiveness of wearing masks to limit the spread of the coronavirus.”

Washington Post: Republicans raise money on Facebook by tying migrant influx to covid surge. “Facebook has allowed prominent Republican officials and candidates — including the chairman of the Senate Republican Conference — to use the platform’s powerful ad technologies to raise money by associating migrants with the surge of coronavirus infections in the southern United States. The ads, whose central claim has been rejected by doctors and fact-checkers, illustrate the platform’s inconsistent approach to defining coronavirus misinformation, especially when elected officials are involved. ”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

Route Fifty: Masks Are Back, Maybe for the Long Term. “In the past week and a half, I’ve spoken with, texted, emailed, messaged, and tweeted dozens of sources, readers, friends, family members, and total strangers about the CDC’s announcement. My correspondences have been a mix of emotions. Some are relieved that the CDC has officially reunited vaccines and masks, a scientifically powerful pairing that many experts think never should have been broken up. But I also heard frustration, confusion, even betrayal.”

Washington Post: Covid killed her husband. Now it’s taking the only home her kids have ever known.. “Alan’s death had not only devastated their family emotionally, it had broken them financially. Even as they grieved, the Grims — like tens of thousands of other families shattered by the pandemic — were now facing a cascade of secondary losses: income, home, school friends, long-held plans for the future.”

Phys .org: Cities after COVID: Resiliency is about embracing the crisis as part of a new brand story. “Cities as we know them are under attack thanks to COVID-19. Their growth, sustainability and ability to attract investment, tourism and talent are extremely vulnerable during times of crisis. In the last hundred years, cities have seen an increase in crises, pandemics and economic pressures—but not all are hit equally.”

Prio: Burden of Pandemic May Motivate Violent Protest and Antigovernment Sentiment. “The sometimes-violent antigovernment demonstrations that erupted during 2020 and 2021 were fueled in part by the spread of extremist ideologies, conspiratorial thinking, and political polarization. New research published in the journal Psychological Science also puts some of the blame for civil unrest and political violence on the psychological burden of the COVID-19 pandemic.”

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

CNN: Texas hospital system is prepping tents to deal with rapid surge in Covid-19 patients. “Harris Health System in Houston is reporting 1 in 4 patients at its two hospitals have tested positive for Covid-19. Ben Taub Hospital’s intensive care unit is at 95% capacity with 27% of utilization by Covid-19 patients and Lyndon B. Johnson Hospital, where the tents are being set up, is at 100% ICU utilization with 63% Covid cases, Harris Health spokesperson Bryan McLeod told CNN in an email.”

Texas Tribune: Dozens of Texas hospitals are out of ICU beds as COVID-19 cases again overwhelm the state’s capacity. “The state is divided into 22 trauma service areas, and half of them reported 10 or fewer available ICU beds on Sunday. As more than 9,400 COVID-19 patients fill the state’s ICUs, which are reserved for the patients who are the sickest or most injured, the trauma service area that includes Laredo reported no available ICU beds, while the area that includes Abilene reported having one. At least 53 Texas hospitals have no available ICU capacity, according to numbers reported to the federal government during the week ending Aug. 5.”

Reuters: Arkansas nearly out of ICU beds as Delta variant fuels U.S. pandemic. ” Only eight intensive care unit beds were available on Monday in the state of Arkansas, its governor said, as the rapid spread of the Delta variant of the coronavirus pushed cases and hospitalizations in the United States to a six-month high.”

VT Digger: As Covid-19 reappears in Vermont long-term care facilities, many staff remain unvaccinated. “Almost eight months after vaccines became available to medical staff, the overall vaccination rate at Vermont nursing homes was 78%, as of late July. Individual nursing homes ran the gamut when it came to their clinical staff’s vaccination rates, from a high of 95% at Menig Nursing Home in Randolph to a low of 56% at St. Johnsbury Health and Rehabilitation.”

WTVD (Durham North Carolina): ‘The ICU is completely filled:’ COVID surge taking a toll on frontline workers. “The summertime surge of COVID-19 cases is taking a heavy toll on Triangle hospitals: emergency rooms and intensive care units are once again jammed with patients battling severe COVID-19. The local doctors on the front line of the new surge are feeling the frustration of what’s turned into a pandemic of the unvaccinated. And they’re hearing regret from some patients who now wish they had gotten the vaccine.”

AP: Hospitals run low on nurses as they get swamped with COVID. “The rapidly escalating surge in COVID-19 infections across the U.S. has caused a shortage of nurses and other front-line staff in virus hot spots that can no longer keep up with the flood of unvaccinated patients and are losing workers to burnout and lucrative out-of-state temporary gigs. Florida, Arkansas, Louisiana and Oregon all have more people hospitalized with COVID-19 than at any other point in the pandemic, and nursing staffs are badly strained.”

Mississippi Free Press: ‘Where Are You?’: Hospitals Beg Gov. Reeves For Help With 0 ICU Beds Left Statewide. “With no intensive-care beds left in the state, Mississippi reached a new record for patients in an ICU yesterday with 371, surpassing the prior record of 360 set on Jan. 12, 2021. More Mississippians are now on a ventilator than ever before, with the 234 beating the prior record of 230 on Jan. 6. In all, 1,410 residents were hospitalized for the virus yesterday—just below the record 1,444 patients recorded on Jan. 4.”

Atlanta Journal-Constitution: New COVID-19 surge overwhelms hospitals across Georgia. “A steep increase in seriously ill COVID-19 patients has pushed hospitals statewide into crisis mode again this week, prompting worries that the new surge may overwhelm facilities already struggling to find enough nurses to adequately staff emergency rooms and intensive care units. Large hospitals in metro Atlanta frequently went on diversion status this week because they were so full, sending ambulances elsewhere. Some elective procedures started to get pushed back across the state to free up medical staff and hospital beds.”

INSTITUTIONS

Vietnam Net: Museums go digital to survive pandemic. “Museums in the central city of Da Nang have been able to ride out several waves of the coronavirus through online exhibitions and exchanging up-to-date information with visitors through smartphones and social networks.”

Nola: 2021 New Orleans Jazz Fest canceled as Louisiana COVID cases surge; spring dates announced. “The 2021 Jazz Fest, like 2020’s, has been canceled after first being postponed because of surging rates of COVID-19 infections. The loss of the festival, and the thousands of visitors that it would have attracted, is another economic and psychological blow not just for musicians, music venues and festival workers and vendors, but for New Orleans’ larger tourism economy.”

WORLD / FEDERAL GOVERNMENT

AP: Pentagon to require COVID vaccine for all troops by Sept. 15. ” The Pentagon will require members of the U.S. military to get the COVID-19 vaccine by Sept. 15, according to a memo obtained by The Associated Press. That deadline could be pushed up if the vaccine receives final FDA approval or infection rates continue to rise.”

Reuters: Coffee and Croissant in A French Cafe? You’ll Need a Covid Pass For That. “The French morning ritual of a coffee and croissant became more complicated on Monday as people had to show proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test before taking a seat at their favourite cafe, though numerous eateries ignored the new rules.”

ABC News: Canada reopens its border for vaccinated US visitors. “Canada lifted its prohibition on Americans crossing the border to shop, vacation or visit on Monday while the United States is maintaining similar restrictions for Canadians, part of a bumpy return to normalcy from COVID-19 travel bans.”

New York Times: Germany will stop paying for virus tests for people choosing to remain unvaccinated.. “After months of offering free coronavirus antigen tests to all residents, Germany will stop subsidizing them for adults who choose not to get vaccinated, Chancellor Angela Merkel announced Tuesday. Starting Oct. 11, when the changes take effect, the tests will continue to be available at no charge for people under 18, pregnant women or others who have medical reasons not to get vaccinated.”

STATE GOVERNMENT

Ubergizmo: Washington D.C. Giving Away Free AirPods To Encourage Teens To Get Vaccinated. “There are several conditions that teens will need to meet in order to be eligible. This includes their vaccination being the first shot, they must have a parent or legal guardian there with them, and they need to bring identification in the form of their school ID, DC One Card, Kids Ride Free card, a report card, or proof of enrollment.”

Local10: Florida requests 300 ventilators from federal government as COVID cases keep rising. “As a result of the increase in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations, the state of Florida requested 300 ventilators from the federal government, according to a Department of Health and Human Services planning document obtained by ABC News.”

Politico: Abbott asks Texas hospitals to postpone elective procedures to free beds for latest Covid surge. “Republican Gov. Greg Abbott on Monday called on Texas hospitals to voluntarily postpone elective procedures in order to clear more beds for the state’s latest flood of Covid patients. Abbott also said Texas’ Department of State Health Services is working to find out-of-state medical workers to help with the latest surge — a reversal from July, when the state said it would not send additional health care workers to help hospitals battle the latest outbreak.”

CNN: California to mandate vaccines or regular testing for teachers. “California Gov. Gavin Newsom will announce Wednesday that teachers and other school employees must either be vaccinated against Covid-19 or submit to regular testing. Under a new order that Newsom will unveil Wednesday, California will become the first state in the nation to implement such a requirement, which will be effective in mid-October, sources told CNN.”

State of Delaware: Governor Carney Announces Mask Requirement in K-12 Schools, Child Care, State Facilities. “Governor John Carney on Tuesday announced that everyone kindergarten-age and older in K-12 schools and child care homes and centers must wear face coverings indoors effective on Monday, August 16 – regardless of vaccination status. The requirement covers both public and private schools in Delaware. Child care centers and homes are strongly encouraged to require masks for children 2 years old to kindergarten inside their facilities to prevent spread of COVID-19. Children younger than 2 years old should not wear masks due to risk of suffocation.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

Fox 5 Atlanta: Georgia couple dies of COVID-19 hours of each other. “A Georgia couple died from the coronavirus within hours of each other, leaving behind two teenagers. Their loved ones in Hampton now beg anyone who will listen to get the shot.”

CNBC: The world is nowhere near the end of the Covid pandemic, says famed epidemiologist Larry Brilliant. “Dr. Larry Brilliant, an epidemiologist who was part of the World Health Organization’s team that helped eradicate smallpox, said the delta variant of the coronavirus is ‘maybe the most contagious virus’ ever.”

The Wrap: Queen’s Brian May Calls Anti-Vaxxers, Including Eric Clapton, ‘Fruitcakes’. “Brian May has just one word to describe people who are against the COVID vaccine: fruitcakes. And evidently, that includes his own ‘hero,’ Eric Clapton. Clapton has been loudly outspoken against the COVID vaccine and lockdowns since they began. May noted that while he definitely doesn’t share those beliefs — and a few other ideals Clapton champions — he still respects Clapton as a person.”

CNN: Meet the Florida coach who fought hard to beat Covid and now has a message for anyone who hasn’t gotten the vaccine. “As Terry heads back Tuesday to teaching, his family wants to share their rollercoaster of pain, they told CNN, to try to save others from living the kind of agony they endured — especially as average daily coronavirus cases have surged eightfold in Florida in the past month, a CNN analysis of Johns Hopkins University data shows. The Greear family’s message: Get vaccinated.”

SPORTS

BBC: Tokyo 2020: Some Australian Olympians face 28-day quarantine. “Rules meaning some Australian Olympians are having to quarantine for 28 days after returning to their country from Tokyo have been described as ‘cruel’. Athletes returning via Sydney to the state of South Australia are facing an extra two-week quarantine. That is on top of the two weeks already required for all overseas arrivals.”

K-12 EDUCATION

Dallas Morning News: Dallas schools to require masks in defiance of Gov. Abbott’s order. “Starting Tuesday, Dallas ISD will require students and teachers to wear masks at its campuses, defying Gov. Greg Abbott’s order that bars districts from issuing mask mandates. Superintendent Michael Hinojosa announced the change during a Monday morning press conference, saying that it was within his discretion to ensure the health and safety of his employees and the district’s students.”

New York Times: We Studied One Million Students. This Is What We Learned About Masking.. “For more than a year, we’ve worked with North Carolina school districts and charter schools, studying the rate of new Covid cases, the efficacy of mitigation measures such as masking and the increased risks of participating in school-sponsored sports. We have learned a few things for certain: Although vaccination is the best way to prevent Covid-19, universal masking is a close second, and with masking in place, in-school learning is safe and more effective than remote instruction, regardless of community rates of infection.”

San Francisco Chronicle: San Francisco schools will require teachers and other staff to be vaccinated or face weekly testing. “San Francisco school officials will require teachers and other staff to be vaccinated or face weekly testing for the coronavirus, district officials said in a surprise announcement Tuesday. The decision came less than a week before the first day of school Monday and reversed a wait-and-see approach by the district, which included requiring the district’s 10,000 employees to submit vaccination status by the end of the month.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

WRAL: UNC warns students, staff against using fake vaccination records. “Within days of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill announcement that students must show proof of COVID-19 vaccine or submit to regular testing this semester, fake vaccine cards were circulating on campus, students told WRAL News.”

HEALTH

New York Times: The Delta Variant Is Sending More Children to the Hospital. Are They Sicker, Too?. “It is not yet clear whether the Delta variant causes more severe disease in children, but its high level of infectiousness is causing a surge of pediatric Covid-19 cases.”

The Atlantic: Delta Is Bad News for Kids. “Across the country, pediatric cases of COVID-19 are skyrocketing alongside cases among unimmunized adults; child hospitalizations have now reached an all-time pandemic high. In the last week of July, nearly 72,000 new coronavirus cases were reported in kids—almost a fifth of all total known infections in the U.S., and a rough doubling of the previous week’s stats.”

New York Times: See the Data on Breakthrough Covid Hospitalizations and Deaths by State. “Serious coronavirus infections among vaccinated people have been relatively rare since the start of the vaccination campaign, a New York Times analysis of data from 40 states and Washington, D.C., shows. Fully vaccinated people have made up as few as 0.1 percent of and as many as 5 percent of those hospitalized with the virus in those states, and as few as 0.2 percent and as many as 6 percent of those who have died.”

RESEARCH

Newswise: “Survival Kit” Relieves COVID-19 Patients’ Anxiety while Waiting for Hospital Beds. ” Chula Engineering has come up with an idea to help COVID-19 patients handle the crisis of hospital bed shortage and the overflowing number of patients by providing them with ‘a survival kit’ complete with essential items and guidelines for self-care at home, as well as communication channels with officials while waiting for their beds. This is to help relieve the patients’ anxiety and to enable the community to survive the crisis together.”

CRIME / SECURITY / LEGAL

CNET: Norwegian Cruise Line can seek proof of COVID vaccination at boarding, judge rules. “Norwegian Cruise Line is now allowed to ask passengers from Florida if they are fully vaccinated against COVID-19. The cruise company won a preliminary court injunction on Sunday from US District Judge Kathleen M. Williams in Miami.”

The Guardian: Nurse in Germany suspected of replacing Covid vaccines with saline solution. “Authorities in northern Germany have appealed to thousands of people to get another shot of Covid vaccine after a police investigation found that a Red Cross nurse may have injected them with a saline solution. The nurse is suspected of injecting salt solution into people’s arms instead of genuine doses at a vaccination centre in Friesland – a rural district near the North Sea coast – in the early spring.”

OPINION

Washington Post: Opinion: Sorry, Republicans. Your chance to block vaccine and mask requirements has sailed. “Rising covid-19 hospitalizations and a growing sense of dread that the country has slipped away from ‘normal’ have spurred the federal government, state and local officials, and private-sector workplaces to embrace vaccine and mask mandates. It’s time for Republicans to accept that, when it comes to blocking these policies, the ship has sailed.”

Indian Express: Why we need to count the Covid dead. “The official Covid death count as of end-June 2021 is 4,00,000. The reality is, of course, catastrophically worse. Unlike in other countries, authoritative excess death estimates based on official data have not been available because government recording of deaths, especially at the Centre, has been lagging. As a result, thus far, and with some exceptions, attempts to capture the sombre reality have been inadequate.”

Washington Monthly: Tax the Unvaxxed. “Policymakers—and employers—have radically shifted their treatment of vaccine holdouts in recent days. Carrots, like million-dollar prizes and college scholarships, are giving way to sticks and cudgels, with vaccine mandates for government workers and proof of vaccination soon to be required for activities like indoor dining. Life for the unvaccinated will be increasingly inconvenient. It should also become increasingly expensive.”

POLITICS

Politico: Poll: Majorities support vaccine, mask mandates — but not Republicans. “A majority of voters support mandatory coronavirus vaccines and indoor mask-wearing requirements, according to a new Morning Consult/POLITICO poll that shows opposition to the requirements is chiefly limited to Republicans. The survey also found that about half of all voters blame the new wave of infections that have sent numbers spiking equally on the unvaccinated and on political leaders opposed to mask-wearing and social-distancing mandates.”

CNN: Republicans are seizing on backlash to new mask and vaccine mandates. “As Republicans head back to their districts for the August recess, they are hammering the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and seizing on the backlash to new mask and vaccine mandates — part of a GOP-wide effort to use the fears and frustrations of Americans worried about another round of school closures and lockdowns as cudgels against their Democratic opponents.”

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August 11, 2021 at 10:05PM
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Vertebrate-Virus Associations, Sea Level Changes, Iowa Social Services, More: Wednesday ResearchBuzz, August 11, 2021

Vertebrate-Virus Associations, Sea Level Changes, Iowa Social Services, More: Wednesday ResearchBuzz, August 11, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

bioRxiv: The Global Virome in One Network (VIRION): an atlas of vertebrate-virus associations. “Data cataloguing viral diversity on Earth have been fragmented across sources, disciplines, formats, and various degrees of open collation, posing challenges for research on macroecology, evolution, and public health. Here, we solve this problem by establishing a dynamically-maintained database of vertebrate-virus associations, called The Global Virome in One Network (VIRION). The VIRION database has been assembled through both reconciliation of static datasets and integration of dynamically-updated databases.”

NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory: NASA, International Panel Provide a New Window on Rising Seas. “Pull up the tool’s layers of maps, click anywhere on the global ocean and coastlines, and pick any decade between 2020 and 2150: The tool, hosted on NASA’s Sea Level Portal, will deliver a detailed report for the location based on the projections in the IPCC’s Sixth Assessment Report, released on Aug. 9, which addresses the most updated physical understanding of the climate system and climate change.”

KCCI: New tool connects Iowans with social services. “On the new ‘Together We Care’ website, Iowans can search for services by ZIP code or category. It then gives you who to reach out to for help. The goal is to address the economic and social needs of patients.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

TechCrunch: Wix launches a no-code app builder for $200 per month. “This morning, Wix announced a new product for business owners called Branded App by Wix, which allows users to develop native apps without writing code. The publicly traded company provides tools for people and businesses to manage their online presence, but it’s most well-known for its drag-and-drop website builder. Now, the platform is expanding its user-friendly approach by making it possible for anyone to build an app without learning how to code.”

Reuters: Google restricts ad targeting of people under 18. “Alphabet Inc’s GOOGL-Q +0.07%increase
Google is blocking ad targeting based on the age, gender or interests of people under 18, the company said on Tuesday It also said it would turn off its ‘location history’ feature, which tracks location data, for users under 18 globally.”

USEFUL STUFF

Make Tech Easier: How to Create and Manage a WhatsApp Group. “Over 700 million people use WhatsApp daily for messaging and for Internet and video calls. Chances are that you are one of them. Perhaps, you also belong to one or two WhatsApp groups. Here are useful tips on creating and managing a WhatsApp group.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

InfoWorld: The long, long reigns of popular databases. “As Gartner’s Merv Adrian once said, ‘The greatest force in legacy databases is inertia.’ Hence, although it takes a long time to establish a new database, it takes even longer for a once-loved database to finally get dumped. Even when developers move on, their employers don’t. In short, it’s hard to make accurate technology predictions, but here’s one you can bank on: The databases developers love today will be the ones that permeate enterprises 10 years from now.”

Country Living: Beloved “Cheap Old Houses” Instagram Account is Now an HGTV Show. “With the real estate market hotter than ever, it may be hard for prospective buyers to imagine finding a house with good bones, history, and character—all for under $150,000. But these affordable, diamond-in-the-rough residences are just the sort featured on @CheapOldHouses, an Instagram account and subscription newsletter created by husband-and-wife Elizabeth and Ethan Finkelstein.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

CNET: Amazon makes it easier to file complaints about faulty marketplace products. “Amazon is updating its returns policy to make filing complaints about faulty products from third-party sellers easier. From Sept. 1, you’ll be able to contact Amazon directly with property damage or personal injury claims, and the company will connect you with the seller. Right now, the e-commerce giant encourages customers to contact sellers directly about problems with their products.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Nature: ‘Tortured phrases’ give away fabricated research papers. “In April 2021, a series of strange phrases in journal articles piqued the interest of a group of computer scientists. The researchers could not understand why researchers would use the terms ‘counterfeit consciousness’, ‘profound neural organization’ and ‘colossal information’ in place of the more widely recognized terms ‘artificial intelligence’, ‘deep neural network’ and ‘big data’. Further investigation revealed that these strange terms — which they dub ‘tortured phrases’ — are probably the result of automated translation or software that attempts to disguise plagiarism.”

Harvard Business Review: How AI Could Help Doctors Reduce Maternal Mortality. “The United States has the highest maternal mortality rate of all high-income countries. Compared to women in Canada and France, women in the United States are twice as likely to die from childbirth complications. This crisis is especially pronounced in ethnic and racial minority populations: Black and Native American women in the United States are much more likely to perish from pregnancy-related complications than their white counterparts and are more likely to suffer severe maternal morbidity due to postpartum hemorrhage, hypertensive disorders, and sepsis.”

University of Colorado Denver: CU Denver Professor Powers Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Work in Education Through AI Technology. “CU Denver STEM Education Professor Geeta Verma has been empowering women and minorities in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) fields through her National Science Foundation grant and other research activities. Verma has embarked on a new journey and founded a new online platform called LivedXTM. The platform leverages machine learning and artificial intelligence (AI) technologies to accelerate opportunities for minoritized and marginalized youth.” Good morning, Internet…

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August 11, 2021 at 05:38PM
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Tuesday, August 10, 2021

Black Roller Skating Culture, Florida Weeds, James Smithson, More: Tuesday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 10, 2021

Black Roller Skating Culture, Florida Weeds, James Smithson, More: Tuesday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 10, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

AdWeek: Adobe Launches a Striking Digital Collection That Celebrates Black Roller Skating Culture. “…while the sport found a new audience (and some viral love on TikTok), roller-skating has deep roots in Black culture, with skating rinks serving as venues for desegregation protests in the ‘60s and hip-hop concerts in the ‘80s. Adobe and Emmy, Grammy and Tony-award winning actress and singer Cynthia Erivo are highlighting that connection with ‘Stories on Skates,’ a series of six digital animations created using the software company’s 3D tools.

University of Florida: Identify weeds fast with new online tool. “Florida weeds run aplenty, especially in the summer. Getting rid of weeds starts with proper identification, and UF/IFAS experts developed an online tool that organizes weeds by flower color for fast identification. The tool helps identify 130 of the most common weeds found in Florida.”

Smithsonian Magazine: James Smithson’s Family Squabble. “James Smithson, … was the illegitimate child of the first Duke of Northumberland and Elizabeth Hungerford Keate Macie. In the late 18th century, his mother and her sister went head-to-head in court over ownership of property springing from their ancestral roots in the Hungerford family, which had been prominent in the medieval era. Today, to mark the Institution’s 175th anniversary, the Smithsonian Libraries and Archives launches the virtual exhibition ‘A Tale of Two Sisters: The Hungerford Deed and James Smithson’s Legacy,’ providing viewers an opportunity to ‘turn the pages’ of this recently recovered document.'”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

BBC: TikTok named as the most downloaded app of 2020. “TikTok was the world’s most downloaded app in 2020 as it took the top spot from Facebook Messenger, according to digital analytics company App Annie. The Chinese video-sharing platform is the only app not owned by Facebook to make the global top five of downloads.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

The Scotsman: Loch Ness Google Maps: what is the street view picture glitch, why has it gone viral – and has it been sorted?. “Google Maps users were met with the unexpected when they tried to look up the famous loch via the app’s street view mode. Instead of an image of the striking Scottish landscape, they found a selfie of a naked man standing on what appeared to be the patio of an apartment.”

Institute of Museum and Library Services: IMLS Awards More Than 200 Grants to Help Museums Meet Community Needs. “The Institute of Museum and Library Services today announced grant awards totaling $29,545,363 for museums across the nation to improve services to their communities. Through the agency’s largest competitive grant program, Museums for America, and its special initiatives, Museums Empowered and Inspire! Grants for Small Museums, a total of 208 projects were selected from 758 applications requesting $99,543,356. Institutions receiving awards are matching them with $35,214,339 in non-federal funds.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Deutsche Welle: Bangladesh arrests social media star over dance video at mosque. “Police in Bangladesh on Monday announced the arrest of a 20-year-old for his role in filming, starring in, and distributing, a video of himself dancing with a woman on the steps of a mosque in Cumilla, just east of the capital Dhaka. Authorities say they arrested social media personality Yasin at his home in nearby Devidwar on charges that he hurt Muslim religious sentiment as defined under Bangladesh’s 2018 Digital Security Act.”

Ars Technica: New “Glowworm attack” recovers audio from devices’ power LEDs. “Researchers at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev have demonstrated a novel way to spy on electronic conversations. A new paper released today outlines a novel passive form of the TEMPEST attack called Glowworm, which converts minute fluctuations in the intensity of power LEDs on speakers and USB hubs back into the audio signals that caused those fluctuations.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Mongabay: New artificial intelligence tool helps forecast Amazon deforestation. “Nearly 10,000 square kilometers of the Brazilian Amazon, an area the size of Lebanon, is at high risk of being cleared, according to a new tool using artificial intelligence technology to help forecast deforestation before it actually happens. Named PrevisIA (from the Portuguese previsão for ‘forecast’ and IA for ‘artificial intelligence’), the tool analyzes images provided by European Space Agency satellites, and through an algorithm created by the Brazilian conservation nonprofit Imazon, finds areas prone to deforestation.”

Phys .org: Importance of saving Indigenous languages. “Connection to country, culture and community is intrinsically linked to teaching and retaining Indigenous languages, a Flinders University communications expert says. Flinders University Emeritus Professor Andrew Butcher, who has been researching Aboriginal languages of Australia for more than 30 years, highlights the importance of preserving First Nations language, including pronunciation and other details in a recent paper in three Central Australian languages.” Good evening, Internet…

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August 11, 2021 at 05:34AM
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Smithsonian Open Access, Esri ArcGIS, Investigative Journalism, More: Tuesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 10, 2021

Smithsonian Open Access, Esri ArcGIS, Investigative Journalism, More: Tuesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 10, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Smithsonian: Cooper Hewitt’s Interaction Lab Launches Seven Prototypes to Experience the Smithsonian Open Access Collection. “The Interaction Lab at Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum has announced the launch of seven prototypes commissioned under the Activating Smithsonian Open Access program. The selected teams each received $10,000 to create new digital interactions and innovative tools that enable play and discovery with 2D and 3D digitized assets from the Smithsonian’s Open Access collections. The teams retain ownership of the intellectual property developed from the program.”

EVENTS

Esri: Esri Offers Free Online Course That Teaches Cutting-Edge Imagery Capabilities. “Beginning August 11, Esri, the world leader in location intelligence technology, is offering a free six-week online course to explore imagery and remotely sensed data using Esri’s ArcGIS software. Focused on capturing, processing, visualizing, analyzing, and sharing imagery data—gaining insight from the pixels—the course is open to anyone.”

Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas: Learn how to enhance your investigative reporting in platforms: Register for new Knight Center course. “‘Investigative reporting in platforms: How to dig into social accounts, images, ads, and messaging apps’ runs from Sept. 6 to Oct. 10, 2021. Craig Silverman and Jane Lytvynenko, two leading experts on online disinformation, fake news, and digital investigations, will teach the five-week course, which also focuses on workflows and organization for the information you’ll gather.” It’s not free, but $95 for a five-week class like that sounds like a bargain.

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

The Verge: Substack is getting into comics. “Substack is trying to put a new spin on webcomics. The newsletter platform announced today that it’s signed a number of comics creators up to use its platform. They’ll email comics out to readers and use Substack’s subscription tools to charge directly for access to their work.”

USEFUL STUFF

Lifehacker: 10 Time-Saving Features and Settings You Should Be Using on Your iPhone. “Basic tasks can sometimes feel like a chore on your iPhone because it takes a lot of time for something trivial. For example, the Camera app keeps opening to the default photo mode, and you have to keep sliding over to other modes such as portrait or video. Fortunately, it’s possible to save a lot of time by speeding up a lot of basic tasks on your iPhone. We’re going to share our favorite time-saving tips that you might enjoy.” Warning: this is a slideshow.

Bustle: An Extremely Comprehensive Guide To Deleting Snapchat. “Like all of the retail and real estate newsletters you never meant to end up on in the first place, permanently opting out of social media platforms tends to be an intentionally dizzying effort. Snapchat is no exception. While you can log out or delete the app from your home screen, in order to disable your account and get rid of your discoverable content, you have to go to the accounts portal, a mysterious place where you can learn about your data, your privacy, and maybe figure out how to delete your Snapchat account.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

ZDNet: Why is your identity trapped inside a social network?. “The creators of the Internet didn’t finish the job, they didn’t create a personal protocol to give people control of their identities. As a result, humans on the Internet exist not as individuals but as the creation of social media databases that monopolize personal information.”

Ubergizmo: It Looks Like Space Won’t Be Safe From Ads. “Whether you’re driving down the street, reading a newspaper, checking your mail, or browsing the web on your phone, you’re bound to come across an ad or two. However, it seems that even the deep, dark recesses of space won’t be spared by advertisers because that’s what SpaceX and Geometric Energy Corporation are planning to do.” Enjoy your majestic-views-of-space-sans-billboards while they last.

SECURITY & LEGAL

NBC News: Big Tech call center workers face pressure to accept home surveillance. “Six workers based in Colombia for Teleperformance, one of the world’s largest call center companies, which counts Apple, Amazon and Uber among its clients, said that they are concerned about the new contract, first issued in March. The contract allows monitoring by AI-powered cameras in workers’ homes, voice analytics and storage of data collected from the worker’s family members, including minors. Teleperformance employs more than 380,000 workers globally, including 39,000 workers in Colombia.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Phys .org: Scientists meld Twitter and satellite views to understand epic impact. “Scientists are using two bird’s-eye views—remote sensing from satellites and the voices of Twitter—to synthesize the environmental impacts of sprawling infrastructure projects and how the people who live amongst them feel about the changes.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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August 10, 2021 at 11:49PM
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Vaccine Guide for Youth, IceCube Neutrino Observatory, PetitPotam, More: Tuesday ResearchBuzz, August 10, 2021

Vaccine Guide for Youth, IceCube Neutrino Observatory, PetitPotam, More: Tuesday ResearchBuzz, August 10, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Smithsonian: Smithsonian Science Education Center, With Support of the World Health Organization, Launches Vaccine Guide for Youth. “The guide features eight tasks that incorporate investigations and hands-on science to help students discover, understand and take action. Students will learn about the science of vaccines throughout history; how vaccines work and are developed; examine issues of equity, access and misinformation; and develop an action plan for addressing concerns within their communities.”

IceCube Neutrino Observatory: 10 years of IceCube data now publicly available at NASA’s HEASARC archive. “The IceCube Neutrino Observatory is an enormous neutrino detector that comprises 5,160 light sensors attached to 86 bundles of cable (called ‘strings’) that are buried in a cubic kilometer of ice a mile below the surface at the South Pole. A cooperative effort of the international IceCube Collaboration, its purpose is to detect astrophysical neutrinos: elusive, lightweight particles that are created by the most energetic phenomena in the universe.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Bleeping Computer: Windows PetitPotam vulnerability gets an unofficial free patch. “A free unofficial patch is now available to block attackers from taking over domain controllers and compromising entire Windows domains via PetitPotam NTLM relay attacks. The PetitPotam attack vector that forces Windows machines to authenticate against threat actors’ malicious NTLM relay servers using the Microsoft Encrypting File System Remote Protocol (EFSRPC) was disclosed last month by security researcher Gilles Lionel (aka Topotam).”

SEO Roundtable: Yahoo Sign Taken Down At Sunnyvale Headquarters. “This is sad, here is a photo from Twitter of the Yahoo sign in front of the Yahoo Sunnyvale, California headquarters, being taken down. You can see tons of legacy photos of this iconic sign on Shutterfly or on Google.”

CNET: Twitter highlights the most tweeted events from the Tokyo Olympics. “The 2020 Tokyo Olympics came to a close Sunday night, but on Monday Twitter took a look back at the most noteworthy trends from the 17 days of international competition. The social media giant found that the most tweeted event was Brazil’s Rayssa Leal winning silver in women’s street skateboarding.”

USEFUL STUFF

Lifehacker: How Take Glorious Sunset Photos With Your Smartphone, Because Yours Suck. I am done with the “bullying headlines” trend. “If you want a really good picture of a sunset, you know that what you probably need is a real camera, by which we mean ‘not a smartphone.’ But unless you’re a professional photographer—or even an amateur photographer who takes pictures as a hobby—chances are the only camera you’ve got with you when that sunset lights up the beach lives in your smartphone. So let’s go with it, because hey, a smartphone can take a hell of a photo these days.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

New York Times: Text Memes Are Taking Over Instagram. “Known in internet slang as shitposting, this style of posting involves people publishing low-quality images, videos or comments online. On Instagram, this means barraging people’s feeds with seemingly indiscriminate content, often accompanied by humorous or confessional commentary. A growing ecosystem of Instagram accounts has embraced this text-heavy posting style, which has exploded in popularity among Gen Z users during the pandemic.”

Ars Technica: Deep dive into stupid: Meet the growing group that rejects germ theory. “Yes, you read that correctly: germ theory denialists—also known as people who don’t believe that pathogenic viruses and bacteria can cause disease. As an extension of their rejection of basic scientific and clinical data collected over centuries, they deny the existence of the devastating pandemic that has sickened upwards of 200 million people worldwide, killing more than 4 million.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

The Independent: Apple responds to growing alarm over iPhone photo scanning feature. “Apple has responded to growing alarm over its new iPhone scanning feature from privacy experts and competitors. Last week, the company announced that it would be rolling out new tools that would be able to look through the files on a users’ phone and check whether they included child sexual abuse material, or CSAM.”

Engadget: Record labels sue Charter over copyright infringement claims. “Charter Communications has been sued by a group of major record labels who claim it has failed to address ‘flagrant and serial’ music copyright infringement, The Verge has reported. It’s the second time over the last several years that the group has sued Charter over song piracy.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Techdirt: Content Moderation At Scale Is Impossible To Do Well: Series About Antisemitism Removed By Instagram For Being Antisemetic. “We’ve pointed this out over and over again in a variety of contexts. One classic example is social media websites pulling down human rights activists highlighting war crimes by saying it’s ‘terrorist content.’ Another were the many examples of people on social media talking about racism and how they’re victims of racist attacks having their accounts and posts shut down over claims of racism. And now we have another similar example. A new video series about antisemitism posted its trailer to Instagram… where it was removed for violating community guidelines.”

BBC: Why artificial intelligence is being used to write adverts. “What springs to mind when you think of advertising? Don Draper in the TV show Mad Men sipping a cocktail? Or perhaps trendy people swapping catch phrases in a converted warehouse?’ Well, more of the creative work these days is not being done by humans at all.” Good morning, Internet…

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August 10, 2021 at 05:32PM
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Monday, August 9, 2021

Lead Isotope Analyses, Local Bookstores, Stingle, More: Monday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 9, 2021

Lead Isotope Analyses, Local Bookstores, Stingle, More: Monday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 9, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Phys .org: A database of 3,000 lead isotope analyses in geological and archaeological samples from the Iberian Peninsula. “The use of lead isotopic data has been shown to be a useful tool in the investigation of raw materials in geological site exploration and metal provenance studies in archaeology. Users of this type of information have often requested complete datasets that include not only numerical values of isotope ratios, but also mineralogical and geological information about the samples analyzed, to enable the data to be compared.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Google Blog: Discover and Support Local Bookstores with Google Maps. “Today is National Book Lovers’ Day in the U.S. Since we’ll take any excuse to celebrate our love of the written word, we’ve pulled together top U.S. trends from Search and Maps for our fellow bibliophiles out there, along with tips to hunt down local bookstores that are worth, well, bookmarking.”

USEFUL STUFF

Ars Technica: Stingle is a privacy-focused open source photo backup application. “With Google Photos killing off its Unlimited photo backup policy last November, the market for photo backup and sync applications opened up considerably. We reviewed one strong contender—Amazon Photos—in January, and freelancer Alex Kretzschmar walked us through several self-hosted alternatives in June. Today, we’re looking at a new contender—Stingle Photos—which splits the difference, offering a FOSS mobile application that syncs to a managed cloud.” If you’re interested in the nuances and potential problems with a service like this, Ars Technica is one of the few sites online that generally has an interesting and useful comments section.

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

TechCrunch: CommandBar raises $4.8M to make web-based apps searchable. “CommandBar’s business-to-business tool, referred to as ‘command k,’ was designed to make software simpler and faster to use. The technology is a search interface that sits on top of web-based apps so that users can access functionalities by searching simple keywords. It can also be used to boost new users with recommended prompts like referrals.”

Slate: The Most Cursed Emojis of All. “As someone who has used an iPhone for all of her adult life (after several lucky teenage years with an LG Chocolate in robin’s egg blue), there are certain things about Android phones that are simply mysteries to me. For instance, I only recently learned that the Android plays home to one of the most cursed phone features of all time: the Google Emoji Kitchen, a function on the Google’s Android keyboard.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Baltimore Sun: Wiretaps for Facebook? Maryland authorities are getting permission to tap digital and social media apps.. “In pursuit of suspected drug traffickers last year, authorities in Harford County took the investigative step of getting a judge’s permission to listen in on the target’s phone conversations. But in a rare move, they also were able to secure a wiretap for his Facebook page, enabling them to listen in on audio calls placed through the app and monitor activity on the social networking site.”

Reuters: Facebook pressed by U.S. lawmakers on disabling NYU research accounts. “U.S. lawmakers pressed Facebook Inc (FB.O) on Monday on why it disabled the accounts of researchers studying political ads on the social media platform, saying it was ‘imperative’ that experts be allowed to look into ‘harmful activity … proliferating on its platforms.'”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Wired: This New Way to Train AI Could Curb Online Harassment. “Social media companies use artificial intelligence to identify and remove posts that demean, harass, or threaten violence against women, but it’s a tough problem. Among researchers, there’s no standard for identifying sexist or misogynist posts; one recent paper proposed four categories of troublesome content, while another identified 23 categories. Most research is in English, leaving people working in other languages and cultures with even less of a guide for difficult and often subjective decisions.”

Beyond Search: Google Search: An Intriguing Observation. “Net net: The degradation of Google began around 2005 and 2006. In the last 15 years, Google has become a golden goose for some stakeholders. The company’s search systems — where is that universal search baloney, please? — are going to be increasingly difficult to refine so that a user’s query is answered in a user-useful way.”

OTHER STUFF I THINK IS COOL

Boing Boing: Norman’s Sky, tiny low-res No Man’s Sky pastiche, gets an update. “No Many’s Sky was an eagerly-awaited, initially-disappointing and ultimately astounding space exploration game. Norman’s Sky was an ultra low-res pastiche released by nothke before its original launch. Just as with the real thing, Norman’s Sky now benefits from a range of updates.” 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 10, 2021 at 05:26AM
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North Carolina Newspapers, Facebook, Google, More: Monday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 9, 2021

North Carolina Newspapers, Facebook, Google, More: Monday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 9, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

DigitalNC: Complete Collection of the Iredell Citizen Now Available. “Thanks to our partner, Iredell County Public Library, and support from the North Caroliniana Society the complete collection of the Iredell Citizen spanning from 1998 to 2008 is now available on our website. This is only one of two newspapers that we have for Iredell County.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Engadget: Facebook adds Photobucket and Google Calendar to its data portability options. “Facebook has today announced that it has added two new destinations for when you want to move your data from the social network. In a blog post, the company said that users will be able to move their images to Photobucket and event listings to Google Calendar.”

ZDNet: Google’s new tool helps you find abandoned cloud projects and delete them. “Google’s Unattended Project Reminder feature has moved to a public preview and aims to improve cloud utilization, and address security issues caused by forgotten old cloud-computing projects that shouldn’t be around anymore. Unattended Project Reminder, a part of Google Cloud’s Active Assist, could be useful in reducing security risks by finding those old initiatives, such as a prototyping project, that no longer require network access, cloud resources, or supported APIs.”

USEFUL STUFF

Hongkiat: Create GIFs Directly On Chrome with Chrome Capture. “Today, GIFs are commonly used for entertainment, business, and even for explaining things to people as it has a smaller file size compared to a video. GIF is also supported by all web browsers as well as instant messaging apps, so using it is really convenient Well, good thing is that there’s a Chrome plugin to create simple GIFs called Chrome Capture.”

Search Engine Journal: 8 Awesome WordPress Plugins That’ll Make Your Site Mobile-Friendly. “You have just seconds to get someone’s attention and persuade them to stay on your site. If your site doesn’t work or is slow to load, that person will not come back. Thankfully, the process of optimizing your site for mobile isn’t rocket science, and you can do it on your own with the assistance of WordPress plugins.”

Ghacks: How to download and convert Google Keep notes. “If you want to migrate to another note taking solution, for instance because you want to reduce the number of Google apps and services that you use, to migrate to an open source alternative, or fear that Google might kill the service eventually, then you need to figure out how to export your Google Keep data and get it imported into another note taking application. In this guide, I’ll be walking you through these steps (sans the importing into another note taking application, but you will get some suggestions).”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

NextGov: NARA Plans to Expand Access to Digital Records Over the Next 5 Years. “The National Archives and Records Administration released its draft 2022-2026 Strategic Plan with a heavy focus on maximizing the use and availability of digital records. By the end of this year, NARA will only be accepting electronic records from federal agencies. But that digital revolution will mean big changes for NARA, too, and the agency is working on a strategic plan to continue that evolution through 2026.”

Mashable: On TikTok, being ‘written by a woman’ is the ultimate compliment. “Male authors have been accused of writing women as one-dimensional beings with little development compared to their male counterparts. Women written by men are also infamous for being described in vivid, unnecessary detail. Discussions about men written by women and women written by men have been brewing on TikTok for months, inspiring a meme in which users transcended the gender dichotomy.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Bleeping Computer: Prometheus TDS: The $250 service behind recent malware attacks. “Security researchers investigating multiple malware distribution campaigns found that an underground traffic distribution service called Prometheus is responsible for delivering threats that often lead to ransomware attacks. Among the malware families that Prometheus TDS has dished out so far are BazarLoader, IcedID, QBot, SocGholish, Hancitor, and Buer Loader, all of them commonly used in intermediary attack stages to download more damaging payloads.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

The Verge: SteamVR beta lets you arrange desktop windows inside your virtual world. “As of its latest beta release, Valve’s SteamVR software can add floating desktop windows inside VR games, letting you keep an eye on other apps without leaving VR. It’s a helpful addition, allowing players to keep an eye on anything from Discord, to a Twitch chat, or Netflix during a lower-intensity game.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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



August 9, 2021 at 11:33PM
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