Friday, August 20, 2021

3D Mouse Brain, Saudi Justice Ministry, MS Paint, More: Friday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 20, 2021

3D Mouse Brain, Saudi Justice Ministry, MS Paint, More: Friday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 20, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Baylor College of Medicine: Largest 3D mouse brain map to help understand what makes brains smarter. “Neuroscientists seeking to understand how the brain processes information along neocortical circuits, and researchers wanting to treat brain disorders where wiring or connections are altered now have a new analytical tool at their fingertips: the largest 3D wiring diagram of the mouse brain containing hundreds of thousands of cells and nearly half a billion connections.”

Zawya: Saudi Justice Ministry launches new digital platform. “The platform will allow the public, including parties of the case and lawyers, easy access to final commercial rulings issued by courts of the first instance, courts of appeal, and the Supreme Court, in addition to other legal documents.” There’s a section on “justice systems,” that’s in English, but the rest of the site is in Arabic. Google Translate handles it for the most part.

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Ars Technica: The once-doomed MS Paint gets its first redesign in over a decade. “The latest Windows 11 app to get a coat of paint is Paint, everyone’s favorite meme-making sketching and doodling app. It’s not available for download for Windows Insiders yet, but Microsoft Chief Product Officer Panos Panay posted a brief video of the new design, showing off its updated look, a new dark mode, better text tools, updated brushes, and other tweaks that collectively serve to modernize the app a bit.”

USEFUL STUFF

Make Tech Easier: The Best Two-Factor Authentication (2FA) Apps That Sync With Multiple Devices. “If you’re conscious about your online security, two-factor authentication (2FA) should be on your radar. For the unaware, it’s a better way to validate your identity when you log in to a website than just a single password. It will provide a one-time code that you’ll enter into a dedicated field which authenticates your other credentials. In this post, we look at some 2FA apps that sync across devices, to let you log in wherever you are.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Newsweek: Danny DeVito Gets Twitter Verification Back After Abrupt Loss of Status Sparks Outrage. “Danny DeVito’s Twitter account was briefly unverified before being reinstated, after he tweeted support for striking Nabisco workers. As walkouts spread across U.S. Nabisco bakeries, with union workers protesting proposed changes amid contract negotiations, screen star DeVito took to Twitter to express solidarity on Wednesday.”

Hull Live: Families share memories of airship disaster to mark 100th anniversary. “An appeal for information ahead of the 100th anniversary of an airship disaster that claimed dozens of lives has unearthed a range of ‘touching’ stories and artefacts from the families of casualties, survivors and witnesses. The R.38/ZR-2 exploded mid-flight and crashed into the Humber in front of thousands of onlookers in Hull on August 24 1921, leaving 44 of the aircraft’s 49-strong British and American crew dead.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Arizona Mirror: Appeals court: Senate, Cyber Ninjas must produce ‘audit’ records immediately. “The state Senate can’t duck Arizona’s public records law because some records were created by and are in possession of Cyber Ninjas, the company that GOP legislative leaders hired to conduct a so-called ‘audit’ of the 2020 election in Maricopa County, the Arizona Court of Appeals ruled Thursday. That means the Senate must immediately turn over a bevy of documents requested by American Oversight, a liberal watchdog organization.”

Tubefilter: Senators Challenge TikTok Over Plans To Collect Users’ Face And Voiceprints. “Sens. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and John Thune (R-SD) are asking TikTok to respond to a number of concerns by Aug. 25–namely what biometric data it’s collecting from users, and what it plans to do with that data.”

The Verge: Google gave phone makers extra money to ditch third-party app stores. “Newly unredacted sections of Epic’s antitrust complaint against Google reveal new details on the lengths to which Google went to undermine third-party app stores on the Android platform. According to the new text, starting in 2019, Google ran a ‘Premier Device Program’ that gave Android phone makers a greater share of search revenue than they would normally receive. In exchange, the OEMs agreed to ship their devices without any third-party app stores preinstalled.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

CNET: Elon Musk unveils Tesla Bot, a humanoid robot utilizing Tesla’s vehicle AI. “Tesla CEO Elon Musk on Thursday unveiled a humanoid robot called the Tesla Bot that runs on the same AI used by Tesla’s fleet of autonomous vehicles. A functioning version of the robot didn’t make an appearance during Musk’s reveal, though a slightly bizarre dance by a performer dressed like a Tesla Bot did.” Good evening, Internet…

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August 21, 2021 at 05:04AM
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Dance Music History, Fulbright Program, LibreOffice, More: Friday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 20, 2021

Dance Music History, Fulbright Program, LibreOffice, More: Friday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 20, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Mixmag: An Online Archive Is Documenting 30 Years Of Dance Music History. “The Dance Music Archive is an online database that documents 30 years of dance music and rave culture. Just launched, the website allows visitors to explore each decade of dance music history from the 1980s onwards, through DJ mixes, radio shows, blogs, artwork and more. The team has ripped CDs, gathered physical documents and curated Spotify playlists to create an exciting audio-visual timeline.”

University of Arkansas: New Digital Collection Focused on International Scholarship Program. “A new digital collection, funded in part by the U of A’s Chancellor’s Innovation Fund, is now available to researchers worldwide. Drawing on materials from two archival collections in the University Libraries Special Collections Division, the Fulbright Program History Digital Collection provides information about the establishment of the Fulbright Program and the work of its early commissions.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

BetaNews: LibreOffice 7.2 is here with a long list of changes and improvements. “Serving as a handy reminder that Microsoft Office is certainly not the only office suite out there, LibreOffice 7.2 has landed. There are a sizable number of changes in this latest version of the free, open-source office software including support for Apple M1 chips.”

CNET: OnlyFans will prohibit sexually explicit content starting in October. “The London-based livestreaming website OnlyFans will begin prohibiting sexually explicit content starting in October, the company said Thursday. The new standards will still permit nudity, provided that creators post in accordance with the site’s acceptable use policy.”

TechCrunch: Twitter rolls out a series of improvements to its Direct Message system. “Have you ever tried to share a funny tweet with a few friends via Twitter DM, only to accidentally start a group chat? You’re not alone. Today, Twitter announced that it will roll out a few quality of life improvements to its direct messaging system over the next few weeks, including the ability to DM a tweet to multiple people at once in individual conversations. Researcher Jane Manchun Wong noticed that Twitter was working on this functionality last month.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Mashable: The TikTok controversy over collecting human bones, explained. “Human bone collector and distributor Jon Ferry built a TikTok following of nearly 457,000 for his videos sharing facts about human anatomy, showing viewers how forensic anthropologists use bones in their research, and displaying his (literal) bone-chilling collection of human remains. Ferry’s pièce de résistance, which he refers to his ‘pride and joy,’ is a corner stacked floor to ceiling with human spines.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

CNN: Facebook bug exposes some contact information. “The bug, which has since been repaired, was part of the Download Your Information tool, which lets Facebook users export all the data from profiles, such as posts to their timeline and conversations with friends. People using the tool may have downloaded inadvertently the contact information for people they were somehow connected to.” This seems to be something to be aware of, but not get too wound up about.

AP: Lawsuit: Iowa governor’s office violating open records law. “Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds’ office is illegally delaying the release of public records related to its $26 million, no-bid coronavirus testing contract, a new lawsuit contends. Reynolds and her office’s public records custodian, attorney Michael Boal, are the latest officials to be accused of violating open records laws by a Utah-based company investigating testing programs in several states.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

New York Times: Are You Ready for Sentient Disney Robots?. No. “There are animatronics at Disney World that have been doing the same herky-jerky thing on loop since Richard Nixon was president. In the meantime, the world’s children have become technophiles, raised on apps (three million in the Google store), the Roblox online gaming universe and augmented reality Snapchat filters. Cars are driving themselves, and SpaceX rockets are autonomously landing on drone ships How are the rudimentary animatronic birds in Disneyland’s Enchanted Tiki Room supposed to compete? They dazzled in 1963. Today, some people fall asleep.”

Poynter: Lessons learned from a year covering fact-checking. “I wrote in my parting email to the verified signatories of the IFCN’s Code of Principles that their work is a sisyphean task. You debunk a falsehood about something like chemical spraying helicopters in Italy only to see it pop up again in Ireland or France. Some of the details have changed, but the structure remains the same, and worse yet the repetition of the falsehood makes it easier for people to believe. Add to that the political and financial benefits of spreading malignant falsehoods, combined with the scapegoating of fact-checking organizations for technology companies’ content moderation decisions, and you’ve got a profession that requires a healthy dose of self-care and mental health days.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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August 20, 2021 at 11:27PM
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Friday CoronaBuzz, August 20, 2021: 68 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Friday CoronaBuzz, August 20, 2021: 68 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.

USEFUL STUFF

New York Times: Put Your Smartphone to Work for Your Return to the Office. “Contactless bagel orders and finding new routes can help you keep social distance in your commute. And don’t forget your vaccination card.”

Mashable: How to live with the Delta variant, according to disease experts. “Here’s how to live with the troubling Delta variant, both during the current fourth wave of U.S. infections, and after. For the current surge, adjusting to Delta has similarities and differences depending on whether you’re vaccinated, unvaccinated, or immunocompromised.”

UPDATES

New York Times: Israel, Once the Model for Beating Covid, Faces New Surge of Infections. “Last spring, Israel’s remarkably swift vaccination campaign was seen as a global model. Coronavirus infections plummeted, an electronic pass allowed the vaccinated to attend indoor concerts and sporting events, and distancing rules and mask mandates were eventually scrapped. Israel offered the world a hopeful glimpse of the way out of the pandemic. No longer.”

AP: ‘Bracing for the worst’ in Florida’s COVID-19 hot zone. “Baptist has over 500 COVID patients, more than twice the number they had at the peak of Florida’s July 2020 surge, and the onslaught isn’t letting up. Hospital officials are anxiously monitoring 10 forecast models, converting empty spaces, adding over 100 beds and ‘bracing for the worst,’ said Dr. Timothy Groover, the hospitals’ interim chief medical officer.”

Yahoo News: Mississippi’s top doctor says COVID is far worse than it’s ever been in the state. “Mississippi’s state health director said the pandemic is worse in the state than it’s ever been, as hospitals run out of beds and thousands of students have already tested positive for the virus since schools opened earlier this month.”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

Newswise: Cannabis use rises during Australian COVID lockdown but less meth on the streets. “Wastewater samples taken during 2020 show that methamphetamine (ice) use plunged in Australia during the first COVID-19 lockdown while cannabis use spiked, according to a new study led by the University of South Australia. Western Australia recorded the largest drop in ice loads, falling more than 50 per cent between April and June 2020, attributed to border closures restricting imports of the popular drug. Cannabis is largely produced locally so national supplies were still plentiful, and wastewater samples reflected this, with all states except the Northern Territory showing large increases in cannabis use.”

Tech Xplore: Study: Pandemic speeded trends away from live TV viewing. “The pandemic accelerated changes in how people use their televisions, further reducing the dominance in traditional live viewing of what networks are showing, a new study has found. Nearly two-thirds of people said in June that they viewed free video on demand content on their televisions once a week, up from 46% in February 2020, according to Hub Entertainment Research.”

ACTIVISM / PROTESTS

Beacon (Maine): GOP lawmakers headline conspiracy-laden vaccine mandate protest. “Conservative lawmakers including Reps. Heidi Sampson (R-Alfred), Tracy Quint (R-Hodgdon), Laurel Libby (R-Auburn), Assistant House Republican Leader Joel Stetkis (R-Canaan) and Republican Sen. Lisa Kiem (Oxford) spoke at the event. In their remarks, they validated false and dangerous claims about vaccines, at times framing the public health initiative as a government experiment in violation of individual liberties. Rep. Chris Johansen (R-Monticello) was also present at the rally after losing his wife to COVID on August 10.”

The Register: Magna Carta mayhem: Protesters lay siege to Edinburgh Castle, citing obscure Latin text that has never applied in Scotland . “Livestreaming the siege against one of the oldest fortresses in Scotland (and Europe) via Facebook, protesters appeared to be objecting to COVID-19 lockdown. However, Scotland has followed England for the time being in removing legally enforceable restrictions, so exactly what the problem was remains unclear.” One of the rare articles in this digest that might leave you in a fit of giggles, thanks to the laconic, unflappable Scotland law enforcement.

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

SurvivorNet: ‘Operation Colon Extraction Is Underway’: Stage IV Cancer Patient Gets Life-Saving Surgery in Iowa After Florida Surgery Cancelled Due to COVID Surge. “Jac E. Chace was preparing to have her colon removed last week so that she could begin treatment for colon cancer when she was informed her appointment would have to be rescheduled because of COVID cases utilizing all of the hospital’s facilities. A week later, thanks to a little luck and a lot of coordinating, she was recovering from that canceled surgery after managing to find an available surgeon with an opening in Iowa.”

Daily Memphian: Hospital emergency directors call for immediate countywide mask mandate. “The emergency directors of every hospital system in the city are urging local leaders to ‘reinstitute a mask mandate immediately’ and warning of a crisis for hospitals battling shortages of skilled medical professionals and a COVID rate of hospitalizations expected to double by the end of this month and ‘increase six-fold by the end of September.’ That’s according to a letter being signed Tuesday, Aug. 17, by all of the directors that was read to the City Council by chief operating officer Doug McGowen.”

Washington Post: An Alabama doctor watched patients reject the coronavirus vaccine. Now he’s refusing to treat them.. “In Alabama, where the nation’s lowest vaccination rate has helped push the state closer to a record number of hospitalizations, a physician has sent a clear message to his patients: Don’t come in for medical treatment if you are unvaccinated. Jason Valentine, a physician at Diagnostic and Medical Clinic Infirmary Health in Mobile, Ala., posted a photo on Facebook this week of him pointing to a sign taped to a door informing patients of his new policy coming Oct. 1.”

HEALTH CARE – PEDIATRICS

Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Ga. hospitals stretched with influx of kids battling COVID-19, other viruses. “More kids than ever before are suffering from coronavirus cases so severe that they need to be hospitalized, filling pediatric wards at a time when physicians are also contending with an unseasonable surge of other respiratory viruses. Many area children’s hospitals are reporting that more than three-quarters of their ICU beds are occupied — in some places, it’s closer to 90%.”

HEALTH CARE – CAPACITY

The Columbian: Oregon hospitals near breaking point as COVID surges. “As of Wednesday, 850 coronavirus patients were hospitalized in Oregon — surpassing the state’s record, which was set the previous day. Before this month, the hospitalization record was 622 in November, during a winter surge and when vaccines were not yet available. More than a third of the state’s 652 adult ICU beds are being used for COVID-19 patients. Health officials say the overwhelming majority of hospitalized virus patients are unvaccinated.”

CNBC: Florida and Texas open Covid antibody treatment centers as delta surge overwhelms hospitals. “Texas is setting up nine antibody infusion centers, Gov. Greg Abbott announced Friday, while Florida launched its fifth site Wednesday. With the delta variant surging, more than 46% of Texas’ intensive care beds and over half of Florida’s ICU capacity were filled with coronavirus patients as of Thursday, compared with 27% nationwide, according to the Department of Health and Human Services.”

AL: Expect 5,000 COVID patients in Alabama hospitals next month, UAB projects. “UAB’s Dr. Jeanne Marrazzo said on CNN that 5,000 hospitalizations is a ‘potentially apocalyptic’ scenario for the state, since about a third of unvaccinated patients hospitalized with the delta variant are requiring ICU beds. Already there are not enough available.”

Florida Times-Union: Viral photo of people on floor at Jacksonville Regeneron clinic ‘doesn’t convey how much pain they were in’. “Louie Lopez showed up to the downtown Jacksonville Main Library Conference Center on Wednesday in the early afternoon for a Regeneron therapy appointment. His primary care doctor recommended it after Lopez tested positive for COVID-19 and was experiencing moderate to severe symptoms. While waiting in line for his turn, two other people got in the line behind Lopez. Both of them, he says, sat down on the floor immediately. They eventually laid down ‘sick and moaning.’ Lopez, 59, told the Times-Union the woman pictured in yellow was dragging herself on the floor as the line slowly moved forward. Lopez took a photo and sent it to his wife.”

NPR: Many Hospitals With No Beds Left Are Forced To Send COVID Patients To Cities Far Away. “Many overwhelmed hospitals, with no beds to offer, are putting critically ill COVID-19 patients on planes, helicopters and ambulances and sending them hundreds of miles to far-flung states for treatment. The surge in the delta variant of the virus, combined with low vaccination rates, has pushed hospitals to the brink in many states and resulted in a desperate scramble to find beds for patients.”

INSTITUTIONS

AP: At Midwest state fairs no masks required, vaccines are free. “Nestled between corn dog stands, animal barns and booths touting hot tubs and John Deere tractors, a Hy-Vee pharmacist and several nurses have been administering COVID-19 vaccines at the Iowa State Fair to anyone eligible that wants one. Their booth didn’t have the long lines of more popular attractions, but by Monday more than 150 people had received a shot since the 11-day fair started on Thursday. More than 400,000 people attended the fair in its first four days.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

CBS News: Travelers are canceling trips with COVID numbers rising again: “It was really kind of heartbreaking”. “After a rebound in travel this summer, people are once again canceling plans for trips because of the surging number of COVID cases. In a recent survey, 27% of respondents said they postponed a trip and more than 54% said the Delta variant has made them less interested in traveling right now.”

Wall Street Journal: Florida, Texas Turn to Antibody Treatments as Covid-19 Surges. “Regeneron estimates that as recently as June, fewer than 5% of high-risk patients were receiving treatment, before increasing recently to as much as 30%, said Chief Executive Leonard Schleifer in an interview. The drugs, which have been shown to prevent hospitalizations, are paid for by the federal government, and distributed to patients free of charge. In January 2021, the federal government agreed to pay $2.63 billion for 1.25 million doses, equivalent to $2,100 per dose of Regeneron’s drug, which is a cocktail of two antibodies. The contract followed a previous agreement in July 2020 in which the U.S. paid $450 million for 300,000 doses.”

CNN: Fox News mandates employees disclose vaccination status, contradicting rhetoric from top stars. “The right-wing channel Fox News, whose top personalities have for months assailed the concept of vaccine passports and argued that asking about vaccine status amounts to a major intrusion of privacy, told employees this week that they must disclose their vaccination status to the company.”

The Guardian: Apple delays return to corporate offices until 2022 as Covid cases rise. “Apple Inc is delaying its return to corporate offices from October until January at the earliest because of rising Covid-19 cases and concerns about new variants. The iPhone maker told staff in a memo that it would confirm the reopening plans one month before employees were required to return to the office, according to Bloomberg News.”

Nikkei Asia: COVID slows Apple and Google production shift away from China . “Recent outbreaks of COVID-19 are disrupting plans by Apple, Google, Amazon and their key suppliers to shift production from China to Vietnam as governments tighten border controls to contain outbreaks of new variants of the virus. Google’s upcoming Pixel 6 smartphone range, for example, will be built in China even though the company had planned to move production of the handsets to northern Vietnam early last year, four people familiar with the matter said.”

WORLD / FEDERAL GOVERNMENT

CNN: TSA to extend transportation mask mandate into January. “The Transportation Security Administration will extend its US federal transportation mask mandate through January 18, the agency confirmed late Tuesday afternoon. The mandate was set to expire on September 13.”

VOA: US Ships Pfizer Vaccine to Kosovo amid Delta Variant Surge. “Thursday, the United States plans to ship 35,100 doses of Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine to Kosovo through COVAX, the United Nations vaccine-sharing mechanism, a White House official told VOA. The doses are part of the purchase of half-a-billion Pfizer doses secured by the Biden administration earlier this year.”

Washington Post: How CDC data problems put the U.S. behind on the delta variant. “When Pfizer representatives met with senior U.S. government health officials on July 12, they laid out why they thought booster shots would soon be necessary in the United States. Data from Israel showed the vaccine’s effectiveness waned over time, especially in older and immunocompromised people. But officials from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention disagreed, saying their own data showed something quite different, according to four people with direct knowledge of the meeting who spoke on the condition of anonymity. Other senior health officials in the meeting were stunned. Why hadn’t the CDC looped other government officials on the data?”

STATE GOVERNMENT

State of New Mexico: New Mexico to re-implement indoor mask mandate; vaccinations required in hospitals, congregate settings. “Given the slowing of vaccination rates since a peak several months ago, the governor also announced the state will issue a requirement for all workers in certain medical close-contact congregate settings – including hospitals, nursing homes, juvenile justice facilities, rehabilitation facilities, state correctional facilities and more – to be vaccinated against COVID-19. The state also issued a requirement that all workers at private, public and charter schools in New Mexico either be vaccinated against COVID-19 or otherwise submit to COVID-19 testing on a weekly basis. This policy aligns with the state’s requirement for all state government personnel.”

AP: DeSantis top donor invests in COVID drug governor promotes. “Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis — who has been criticized for opposing mask mandates and vaccine passports — is now touting a COVID-19 antibody treatment in which a top donor’s company has invested millions of dollars. DeSantis has been flying around the state promoting a monoclonal antibody treatment sold by Regeneron, which was used on then-President Donald Trump after he tested positive for COVID-19. The governor first began talking about it as a treatment last year.”

WDEF: Georgia Governor bans cities from imposing Covid restrictions on businesses. “Georgia’s Republican governor has issued an executive order banning cities from requiring businesses to enforce local pandemic restrictions. But what impact, if any, the measure signed Thursday would have on new mask requirements in Atlanta, Savannah and other cities was not clear. At a news conference, Gov. Brian Kemp said his order will prevent local governments from forcing businesses to be the city’s mask and vaccine police.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

WGN: Chicago reinstates indoor mask mandate due to rising COVID-19 cases; adds 8 states to travel advisory. “The mandate, which takes effect Friday for everyone over age 2, is similar to rules in place for much of last year. It will apply to gyms, stores, common areas of apartment buildings and in restaurants, though people will be allowed to remove face coverings while eating and drinking. Masks are already required in schools under Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s statewide order.”

ABC 4: Charleston City Council meeting erupts into chaos during public comment. “The Charleston City Council meeting on Tuesday night erupted into a shouting match during the hour and a half public comment. Most of the people shouting were against a potential mask mandate for schools in the city limits, which eventually failed to pass.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

CNN: 2 US senators announce positive Covid tests Thursday. “Two US senators — Angus King of Maine and Roger Wicker of Mississippi — announced separately Thursday they have tested positive for Covid-19. Both senators are fully vaccinated.”

Axios: Scoop: Probe finds evidence fired Tennessee vaccine official bought dog muzzle sent to her. “A Tennessee investigation found evidence that the state’s fired vaccine chief, Michelle Fiscus, purchased a dog muzzle that she previously claimed someone had mailed in an attempt to intimidate her.”

TMZ: Jerry Messing On Ventilator With Covid-19. “Jerry Messing — the “Freaks and Geeks” actor who’s also the face of a famous meme — has COVID and is fighting for his life in Florida … TMZ has learned. His father, James, tells us … Jerry lives with his parents in an apartment in Tampa, and a few days ago he started feeling really sick all of a sudden and having shortness of breath, but assured his dad he was breathing fine.”

Washington Post: Montgomery County Health Officer Travis Gayles resigns. “Over the course of the pandemic, Gayles advocated for stringent measures to curtail the spread of covid-19, pushed for health equity in vaccine distribution and led a rollout that has resulted in one of the highest vaccination rates in the country. He earned accolades for his positions — including being featured this year on CBS’s ’60 Minutes’ — but also criticism from some who felt he was too cautious, especially when it came to his advice on schools.”

NewsChannel 5 Nashville: ‘I’m fed up,’ says member of Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee’s COVID-19 task force. “A member of Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee’s own COVID-19 task force is breaking ranks with the governor and his approach to the crisis, saying she is ‘fed up.’ In an exclusive interview with NewsChannel 5 Investigates, Dr. Sara Cross of Memphis said she decided to speak up following Lee’s decision to allow parents to opt out of their schools’ mask mandates. That decision, the infectious disease expert said, is not what the science suggests is needed.”

INDIVIDUALS – HEROES

WBRZ: Baton Rouge nurse recognized by Governor, Mayor for vaccination efforts. “Nurse Carla Brown was recognized Tuesday by Gov. John Bel Edwards and East Baton Rouge Mayor-President Sharon Weston Broom for her efforts in fighting COVID-19. After her husband passed away from COVID, Brown traveled door to door giving COVID vaccinations. Nurse Brown vaccinated more than 2,000 people. ”

University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee: From the other side of the world, girl in Kenya learns computer coding at UWM. “‘I use the computer for school, and I wanted to understand more about how they work,’ said Elsie Maingi, who is 10 years old and lives in Nairobi. However, computer classes in Kenya were geared to high school students and business people and were usually quite expensive, said her mother, Lilian Wangechi. So in the fall of 2020, they turned to Google and found the free Girls Who Code program at UWM. Because of the time difference, Elsie got up at 2 a.m. for every class during that semester and the spring 2021 semester.”

INDIVIDUALS – DEATHS

Greenville News: Greenville County GOP leader Pressley Stutts dies from COVID-19. “Greenville County Republican Party leader Pressley Stutts died Thursday morning after battling COVID-19 for nearly a month. Stutts’ death was confirmed by Dan Harvell, who represents the Anderson County Republican Party on the South Carolina Republican Party’s executive committee.”

K-12 EDUCATION

ABC News: Over 10,000 students in Florida school district isolated or quarantined a week into school year. “Just a week into the school year, over 10,000 students and staff in the Hillsborough County Public Schools district in Florida have been isolated or quarantined as districts across the state grapple with COVID-19.”

Politico: Texas drops mask mandate ban enforcement in public schools. “Enforcement in the state’s public school systems of Gov. Greg Abbott’s ban on mask mandates has been dropped, for now, the Texas Education Agency said Thursday. In a public health guidance letter, the TEA said enforcement was being dropped because of ongoing court challenges to the ban. The letter said the new guidance is effective immediately and further guidance will be issued once the litigations are resolved.”

WKRN: Fairview Middle School in Williamson County closed Friday due to illness. “Fairview Middle School will be closed Friday due to a faculty/staff illness and “an inability to staff the building and classrooms.” According to a Williamson County Schools spokesperson, the school will use one of ten days set aside in the school year typically used for inclement weather. New state guidelines do not allow the school to hold a remote learning day.”

CBS 4 Miami: Miami-Dade County Schools Issue Mask Mandate, Defying DeSantis Order. “The Miami-Dade County School Board has voted to implement a mask mandate for the start of the 2021-2022 school year. Parents can opt out their child out with a doctor’s note. The move defies an order from Gov. Ron DeSantis that states the decision must be left up to parents.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

Rice University: From the Provost – Fall Course Instruction Update Aug. 19. “Much remains to be learned about the delta variant and we need to pay close attention to the current surge that is especially pronounced in Texas. We need time to test and assess the prevalence of COVID-19 in the Rice community and its related health outcomes, and to implement any appropriate risk mitigation actions, keeping in mind the effectiveness of vaccination in preventing serious illness. For these reasons, we will move to online instruction for at least the first two weeks of the semester.”

HEALTH

CNN: As Covid-19 cases rise among teens, so do vaccinations, CNN analysis finds. “The rise in Covid-19 vaccinations among adolescents parallels an increase in Covid-19 cases and hospitalizations, mostly fueled by the Delta variant — leading some experts to speculate that parents who were once hesitant to get their children vaccinated are now reconsidering their decision after seeing more young people falling ill. Over the course of the summer, the Covid-19 case rate among adolescents grew nearly five times.”

Science: COVID-19 vaccines may trigger superimmunity in people who had SARS long ago. “Former SARS patients who have been vaccinated against COVID-19 appear able to fend off all variants of SARS-CoV-2 in circulation, as well as ones that may soon emerge, a new study suggests. Their formidable antibodies may even protect against coronaviruses in other species that have yet to make the jump into humans—and may hold clues to how to make a so-called pancoronavirus vaccine that could forestall future outbreaks.”

New York Times: Those Anti-Covid Plastic Barriers Probably Don’t Help and May Make Things Worse. “Under normal conditions in stores, classrooms and offices, exhaled breath particles disperse, carried by air currents and, depending on the ventilation system, are replaced by fresh air roughly every 15 to 30 minutes. But erecting plastic barriers can change air flow in a room, disrupt normal ventilation and create ‘dead zones,’ where viral aerosol particles can build up and become highly concentrated.”

WVTM: UAB seeing increase in unvaccinated pregnant women hospitalized with COVID-19. “Alabama has seen a surge in COVID-19 hospitalizations in recent weeks, with over 2700 people currently being treated at hospitals across the state, and doctors at the University of Alabama at Birmingham say they are noticeably admitting more unvaccinated pregnant women.”

National Geographic: How does COVID-19 affect the brain? A troubling picture emerges.. “Hannah Davis contracted COVID-19 in March 2020, the early days of the pandemic. At the time, the New Yorker was a healthy, 32-year-old freelance data scientist and artist. But unlike many people who come down with the disease, Davis’s first sign of infection wasn’t a dry cough or fever. Her first symptom was that she couldn’t read a text message from a friend. She thought she was just tired, but the fuzziness she felt didn’t go away after a full night’s sleep. More neurological issues followed.”

RESEARCH

Newswise: Joking about COVID-19 Won’t Create Marital Bliss. “Making jokes about COVID-19 to alleviate stress is not necessarily a good way to communicate with your spouse or keep your relationship intact, according to a study by Rutgers and other researchers. Instead, keeping up communication, networking with others, and maintaining a sense of self, is more apt to keep you together, researchers report in findings published in the Journal of Social and Personal Relationships.”

PsyPost: A person’s attachment style predicts the quality of their romantic relationships during the COVID-19 lockdown. “Attachment security predicts better relationship quality during the trying times of lockdown, according to research published in Frontiers in Psychology. By contrast, infection rates, perceived threat from the virus, and level of governmental restrictions were not significant predictors of relationship quality.”

CBS News: Study: Fully vaccinated people with “breakthrough” COVID Delta infections carry as much virus as the unvaccinated. “A study by University of Oxford scientists has found that people who contract the Delta variant of COVID-19 after being fully vaccinated carry a similar amount of the coronavirus as those who catch the disease and have not been inoculated. The researchers stressed that vaccination still offers good protection against catching the disease in the first place, and protects against getting seriously ill with it.”

Nature: Delta’s rise is fuelled by rampant spread from people who feel fine. “People infected with the Delta variant of SARS-CoV-2 are more likely to spread the virus before developing symptoms than are people infected with earlier versions, suggests a detailed analysis of an outbreak in Guangdong, China.”

Washington Post: U.S. officials reviewing possibility Moderna vaccine is linked to higher risk of uncommon side effect than previously thought. “Federal health officials are investigating emerging reports that the Moderna coronavirus vaccine may be associated with a higher risk of a heart condition called myocarditis in younger adults than previously believed, according to two people familiar with the review who emphasized the side effect still probably remains uncommon.”

NBC San Diego: UCSD Researchers Find ‘Gate’ That Allows COVID Infection, Now Need Key to Lock it. “A UC San Diego research team has discovered how a molecule on the outside of the SARS-Cov-2 spike protein acts as a “gate” for the virus that causes COVID-19 infection, which could help find a way to counter the virus; all that’s needed is a ‘key’ to lock it, a new study says.”

PsyPost: Massive study provides evidence that a cognitive technique can help people psychologically cope with COVID-19. “New research published in Nature Human Behaviour suggests that a cognitive strategy can help people to regulate their reactions to emotionally charged events during the COVID-19 pandemic. The technique, known as reappraisal, involves changing how one thinks about a situation to change the emotional response to it.”

PUBLIC OPINION:

Route Fifty: Poll Finds Weak Support for State Bans on Local Mask Mandates. “Only about 33% of respondents to the Axios/Ipsos survey favored states blocking localities from imposing mask requirements, while 66% were opposed. Support for state restrictions on local mask orders was much stronger among Republicans (57%) than Democrats (16%). The findings come as GOP leaders in multiple states have barred mask mandates by localities and in schools, sparking court challenges and push back from local officials.”

OUTBREAKS

Washington Post: Gulf Coast’s beloved ‘Redneck Riviera’ now a virus hotspot. ” Tourists and servers alike dance atop tables and in the aisles at one restaurant on the ‘Redneck Riviera,’ a beloved stretch of towns along the northern Gulf Coast where beaches, bars and stores are packed. Yet just a few miles away, a hospital is running out of critical care beds, its rooms full of unvaccinated people fighting for their lives. On maps that show virus ‘hot spots’ in red, this part of the U.S. coast is glowing like a bad sunburn. And a summer of booming tourism that followed the lockdowns and travel restrictions of 2020 is making the turn toward fall with only a few signs of slowing down.”

CNET: How the delta variant breached Australia’s COVID fortress. “Delta flipped the script. It exposed ineptitude and complacency among the country’s political leaders and uncovered a creeping pandemic fatigue that had infected the population. It divided Australia’s most populous states and showed how quickly the health response can unravel in an unvaccinated country because of poor communication and rising levels of vaccine hesitancy.”

Chattanooga Times Free Press: Dalton declares state of emergency as Hamilton Medical Center sees jump in COVID-19 hospitalizations. “The city of Dalton, Georgia, has declared a state of emergency in response to the rising number of COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations in Whitfield County, permitting city employees to provide much-needed assistance at Hamilton Medical Center. Monday’s decision came just days after the hospital announced it would suspend some elective procedures due to an observed 53% increase in positive cases of the virus.”

CRIME / SECURITY / LEGAL

CNN: FAA proposes more than $500,000 in new fines against unruly airline passengers. “Federal authorities are proposing more than a half-million dollars in new fines against commercial airline passengers they say refused to wear masks, hit flight attendants and even threw luggage across the cabin.”

BBC: Covishield: WHO flags fake jabs in India, Africa. “The World Health Organization (WHO) said it has identified counterfeit versions of India’s primary Covid vaccine, Covishield. The doses were seized by authorities in India and Africa between July and August, a WHO statement said.”

Tech Xplore: Indiana notifying 750K after COVID-19 tracing data accessed. “Indiana health officials said Tuesday they are notifying nearly 750,000 state residents that a cybersecurity company “improperly accessed” their personal data from the state’s online COVID-19 contact tracing survey—a description the company disputed as a ‘falsehood.'”

WKRG: Florida couple arrested in Hawaii with fake COVID vaccination cards, officials say. “Court documents show Florida couple Enzo and Daniela Dalmazzo were arrested on Aug. 11 in Honolulu for having fake vaccination cards after flying from Miami to Hawaii with their two children. She was also charged with having fake vaccine cards for the children ages 4 and 5, who are not yet old enough to be vaccinated.”

KGW: Feds seize over 3,000 fake vaccination cards in Anchorage. “More than 3,000 fake COVID-19 vaccination cards have been confiscated at cargo freight facilities at the Anchorage airport as they were being shipped from China, officials said Thursday. Officers from U.S. Customs and Border Protection seized the cards in the past week as they arrived in small packages, said Jaime Ruiz, an agency spokesperson.”

OPINION

Fresno Bee: The GOP usually loves US military vets, but not the Fresno State College Republicans. “The mean tweet criticizing a U.S. military veteran was cutting in its sarcasm: ‘You’re such a hero that you’ll break down when I light fireworks next door.’ The reference was to how many vets who served in Iraq and Afghanistan suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder and have difficulties when hearing loud sounds that remind them of explosions.”

Washington Post: Opinion: Govs. DeSantis and Abbott, in denial and risking lives, have betrayed the public trust. “In covid-19′s dismal fourth wave, some things haven’t changed. Vaccination still dramatically reduces the chance of serious disease. Mask-wearing and distancing are still effective tools in fighting an easily aerosolized pathogen. But some of the pandemic’s moral mathematics have become harder to figure. Because of the delta variant, more people who did the right thing and took the vaccines are testing positive for covid (though they are far less likely to become dangerously ill). Whole nations that did the right thing — such as Israel, which has vaccinated as much as 78 percent of its population age 12 and older — are seeing new cases rise. The delta virus falls on the just and the unjust.”

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August 20, 2021 at 06:58PM
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New York City Mental Health, Atlanta Law Enforcement, Facebook, More: Friday ResearchBuzz, August 20, 2021

New York City Mental Health, Atlanta Law Enforcement, Facebook, More: Friday ResearchBuzz, August 20, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

NYC Health + Hospitals: Mental Health for All: New York City Launches First Ever Comprehensive Website and Public Education Campaign To Connect New Yorkers to Mental Health Resources. “Mayor Bill de Blasio and First Lady Chirlane McCray today unveiled a new comprehensive website and public education campaign to help New Yorkers navigate all the mental health resources available to them and find substance misuse support that meets their needs.”

Atlanta Journal-Constitution: New Atlanta database details use of force incidents involving police. “Atlanta Police found justification for 87% of the use of force incidents reported since 2017, according to a new database released Monday to track force used against citizens. The public dashboard displays information about at least 47,000 arrests and 501 use of force reports involving some of the city’s 1,600-plus officers. Up to 335 officers have been involved in use of force cases since 2019.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

MakeUseOf: Everything You Need to Know About Brave’s New Privacy-Focused Search Engine. “Brave is an open-source browser based on the Chromium project, but unlike Chrome, which eats up your RAM, Brave offers improved performance and a considerably faster browsing experience. Brave rose to fame as a browser focused on privacy and anonymity. In June, the company launched the beta version of its own search engine that prioritizes privacy above all else. Here’s everything you need to know about Brave’s search engine.”

Washington Post: FTC refiles antitrust case against Facebook, argues no social network comes close to its scale. “The Federal Trade Commission on Thursday refiled a bolstered version of its antitrust case against Facebook. In the complaint, the agency argues that Facebook holds monopoly power in personal social networking, with no other competitor coming close. The complaint alleges that Snapchat is the company’s next-closest competitor, with tens of millions fewer monthly users than either Facebook or Instagram.”

USEFUL STUFF

Mashable: How to make a TikTok. “There are so many different kinds of videos posted on TikTok — from dance videos to Booktok — and it can be challenging to figure out how to recreate TikTok trends. While there are many moving parts when making a TikTok video, they are all made in the same way. Our guide walks through the basics of making a TikTok from hands free recording to adding a sound.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Mashable: Meet TikTok’s Spotify influencers. “The new iteration of music bloggers is TikTokkers with wildly popular Spotify playlists. Some TikTokkers have gained popularity from sharing their musical tastes in videos based around their unique or relatable Spotify playlists. These users have thousands of followers on both TikTok and Spotify, and the music industry is taking notice of their influence.”

BusinessWire: Logitech and Billboard Debut Song Breaker Chart, the First Ever Creator-Centered Music Chart (PRESS RELEASE). “This new monthly chart is the first of its kind to give credit to creators, recognizing their role in helping songs break into the coveted Billboard charts through memes and dance challenges originated or amplified on social media by the creators.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Politico: Library of Congress bomb suspect livestreamed on Facebook for hours before being blocked. “The man suspected of making a bomb threat near the Library of Congress livestreamed his anti-government remarks for hours before Facebook took down his account on Thursday afternoon.”

NPR: The FBI Keeps Using Clues From Volunteer Sleuths To Find The Jan. 6 Capitol Rioters. “As rioters made their way through the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, many of them livestreamed their actions and posted photos and videos on social media. That steady stream of content created an enormous record of evidence that law enforcement needed to sift through to build cases against the accused. Now, more than 575 federal criminal complaints have been filed, and a striking pattern has emerged: Time and time again, the FBI is relying on crowdsourced tips from an ad hoc community of amateur investigators sifting through that pile of content for clues.”

CNN: China now wants to tell influencers how to speak and dress when live-streaming. “The Chinese Ministry of Commerce on Wednesday outlined proposals for an ‘industry standard’ for live-streamers who market products on online shopping platforms. The rules include details about how hosts on such shows should dress or speak in front of the camera, as well as guidelines for how platforms should allow consumers to provide reviews for hosts or the products that they market. Those reviews should also be made public, the ministry said.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

FBI: Girl Scouts of the USA and FBI Sign MOU in Support of STEM Programs for Girls. “The recruitment and retention of individuals with exceptional STEM talent is a top priority for the FBI. Furthermore, the FBI seeks to promote awareness of its mission and initiatives among young people. In furtherance of these goals, the FBI and Girl Scouts of the USA (GSUSA) signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) and are collaborating to increase young women’s interest, confidence, and competency in the fields of science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM).”

CNET: If NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover used Google Photos, it would look like this. “Perhaps one day when we humans finally get to Mars, we’ll take our Android phones and the Google Photos albums and montages we’ve created. Until then, we can live vicariously through a Google video that imagines what it would be like if NASA’s Perseverance rover used the photo-wrangling system.”

OTHER STUFF I THINK IS COOL

Data Centre Dynamics: Rebuilding EDSAC: The first real computer. “The computer industry is careless of history. It may have utterly changed our lives through digitization, but in the process it has neglected its own records. The first true computers were an achievement comparable to a Moon landing, but in some cases, nothing remains of them. Back in 1949, EDSAC was probably the first truly practical computer to go into everyday use. It spawned the first successful commercial computers and the first software libraries. But sixty years later, when engineers and historians wanted to understand it, they had a problem: there were no proper records of how it worked.” Good morning, Internet…

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August 20, 2021 at 05:36PM
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Thursday, August 19, 2021

Illinois Women’s History, Facebook, Manhattan Former Synagogues, More: Thursday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 19, 2021

Illinois Women’s History, Facebook, Manhattan Former Synagogues, More: Thursday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 19, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

PR Newswire: New Landmarks Illinois database highlights over 100 women who built Illinois (PRESS RELEASE). “Landmarks Illinois has published an online database, Women Who Built Illinois, which includes information on over 100 female architects, engineers, developers, designers, builders, landscape architects, interior designers and clients and their projects between 1879 and 1979.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

CNN: Facebook wants you to hold your next meeting in VR. “For those who don’t think Zoom meetings are a good enough substitute for the real thing, Facebook has another idea: a virtual reality app that lets you and your coworkers feel like you’re sitting around a table in a conference room. On Thursday, Facebook (FB) unveiled Horizon Workrooms, a free app for users of its Oculus Quest 2 headset, a device that starts at $299.”

New York Times: Taliban Ramp Up on Social Media, Defying Bans by the Platforms. “The group’s renewed presence on social media has put Facebook, Twitter and YouTube in a tricky position. With governments around the world trying to figure out whether to officially recognize the Taliban as Afghanistan’s rulers, the companies have no easy answers as to whether to continue barring the group online.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Times of Israel: A Twitter account puts the ghosts of Manhattan’s former synagogues on the map. “Writer Luc Sante calls them the ‘ghosts of Manhattan.’ Those are the souls of the poor and marginal people, now dead, whose presence can be felt like a shade in the history of now affluent US neighborhoods, ‘where they push invisibly behind it to erect their memorials in the collective unconscious.’ Sante’s poltergeists came to mind after I stumbled on a strange little Twitter account called ‘This Used to Be a Synagogue.’

SF Gate: Unearthed photo shows Google Street View captured the Bay Area’s ‘Orange Day’. “September 9, 2020 was a strange day, and Google Street View has the receipts.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Bleeping Computer: Secret terrorist watchlist with 2 million records exposed online. “A secret terrorist watchlist with 1.9 million records, including classified ‘no-fly’ records was exposed on the internet. The list was left accessible on an Elasticsearch cluster that had no password on it.”

AP: How AI-powered Tech Landed Man In Jail With Scant Evidence. “Forensic reports prepared by ShotSpotter’s employees have been used in court to improperly claim that a defendant shot at police, or provide questionable counts of the number of shots allegedly fired by defendants. Judges in a number of cases have thrown out the evidence. ShotSpotter’s proprietary algorithms are the company’s primary selling point, and it frequently touts the technology in marketing materials as virtually foolproof. But the private company guards how its closed system works as a trade secret, a black box largely inscrutable to the public, jurors and police oversight boards.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

United Nations: Secretary-General Outlines Elements of Digital Transformation Strategy for Peacekeeping, at High-Level Security Council Debate . “Digital technologies have allowed parts of the global economy and communities connected to the Internet to continue functioning during the COVID-19 pandemic. And, in the realm of peacekeeping, tools reliant on digital technologies, such as long-range cameras, unmanned aerial vehicles, and ground surveillance radars, help peacekeepers protect civilians and themselves. New technologies have great potential, if managed responsibly, to enable safer, harm-free, and more effective operations. But new technologies also pose unfamiliar and profound threats, as seen most clearly in the online proliferation of violent extremist ideologies, increasingly prevalent cyberattacks, and deadly vaccine misinformation.”

The Guardian: TikTok is the new Facebook – and it is shaping the future of tech in its image. “TikTok is the new Facebook – and it is shaping tech in its image. It may seem easy to dismiss as a quirky, short-form video-sharing app, but TikTok is an augury of the tech future to come. Just as Facebook has shaped the internet, the ways we interact, and our approaches and attitudes to personal data for the past two decades, so TikTok has the potential to do the same for the next 20 years.”

OTHER STUFF I THINK IS COOL

Center for Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics: Biard Lecture 2021 – Katie Mack (NCSU) “Physics at the End of the Universe”. “The Big Bang theory tells the story of the beginning of the Universe, our cosmic home for the last 13.8 billion years. But what is the story of its end? I’ll share what modern astrophysics tells us about the ultimate fate of the cosmos, and what each possibility would entail if there were people there to see it. ‘The End of Everything (Astrophysically Speaking)’ is an accessible journey to the end of time, exploring five possible fates of the universe and how physicists are investigating our cosmic future.” Good evening, Internet…

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August 20, 2021 at 05:34AM
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Soapbox Detroit, Journal of Online Trust and Safety, Snapchat Trends, More: Thursday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 19, 2021

Soapbox Detroit, Journal of Online Trust and Safety, Snapchat Trends, More: Thursday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 19, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Model D: New website SoapBox Detroit aims to make city government more accessible. “Daniel Arking calls it his ‘Furlough Friday’ project. As assistant corporation counsel for the City of Detroit, working in the city’s law department, Arking found his Fridays freed up over the first few months of the COVID-19 pandemic. Like much of the staff, Arking was subject to work furloughs as the city wrestled with the onset of the pandemic. Arking took the time off to fully realize an idea that he started to develop in 2017: SoapBox Detroit, a website that gathers city ordinance news and public meeting announcements from the city’s many different departments and divisions and compiles them in one location.”

Stanford Cyber Policy Center: Announcing the Journal of Online Trust and Safety. “The Journal of Online Trust and Safety will be a cross-disciplinary, open access, fast peer-reviewed journal that publishes research on how consumer internet services are abused to cause harm and how to prevent those harms.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Engadget: Snapchat Trends is an overview of the most popular keywords in use in Stories. “Snap is introducing a new tool called Snapchat Trends that provides a public overview of the most popular keywords currently in use on the app. Accessible via the company’s website, you can use the feature to get a sense of the topics that Snapchat users are referencing in Stories they share with the public and their friends. The tool also includes a database you can use to search for specific terms.”

The Verge: Pinterest is adding search filters for different hair textures. “Pinterest is launching a search tool to help people narrow their hair inspiration searches by hair pattern. When users search for hairstyles, new filter options — for coily, curly, wavy, and straight textures, as well as shaved / bald and protective styles — will appear under the search bar.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Harper’s Magazine: Bad News: Selling the Story of Disinformation. I spent the first half of this article wondering if the writer was ever going to get to a point. Then about halfway through everything snaps into place and he starts hitting threes from downtown, including this bit that made me shout hallelujah: “‘Misinformation’ and ‘disinformation’ are used casually and interchangeably to refer to an enormous range of content, ranging from well-worn scams to viral news aggregation; from foreign-intelligence operations to trolling; from opposition research to harassment. In their crudest use, the terms are simply jargon for ‘things I disagree with.’ Attempts to define ‘disinformation’ broadly enough as to rinse it of political perspective or ideology leave us in territory so abstract as to be absurd.”

Smithsonian: Smithsonian American Art Museum Acquires Extraordinary Early Photography Collection From Larry J. West. “The L.J. West Collection includes 286 objects from the 1840s to about 1925 in three groupings: works by early African American daguerreotypists James P. Ball, Glenalvin Goodridge and Augustus Washington; early photographs of diverse portrait subjects and objects related to abolitionists, the Underground Railroad and the role of women entrepreneurs in it; and photographic jewelry that represents the bridge between miniature painting and early cased photography such as daguerreotypes, ambrotypes and tintypes.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

The Guardian: Gun licence applicants in UK face social media checks after Plymouth attack. “Applicants for permission to own a firearm or shotgun will be subject to social media checks after the Plymouth mass shooting, ministers have said. Questions have been asked about how the Keyham gunman Jake Davison, 22, obtained a firearms licence and carried out his attack, in which he killed five people before turning the gun on himself.”

Reuters: China Rebukes 43 Apps Including Tencent’s WeChat for Breaking Data Transfer Rules. “China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) said on Wednesday that 43 apps, including Tencent Holdings Ltd’s WeChat, were found to have illegally transferred user data, and ordered their parent companies to make rectifications. The move comes as Chinese authorities tighten regulatory oversight on a range of industry, with a particular emphasis on privacy and data.”

Ars Technica: Hospitals hamstrung by ransomware are turning away patients. “Dozens of hospitals and clinics in West Virginia and Ohio are canceling surgeries and diverting ambulances following a ransomware attack that has knocked out staff access to IT systems across virtually all of their operations.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Wired: Virtual Reality Lets You Travel Anywhere—New or Old. “LIKE MANY PEOPLE, I was on the fence about using virtual reality for travel. However, tempted by the opportunity to experience places and things I could never visit without time, expense, and travel, I visited the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry (MSI) to check out their spacewalk VR Transporter.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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August 19, 2021 at 11:48PM
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Go-Go Music Photography, Historical Inflation Data, T-Mobile, More: Thursday ResearchBuzz, August 19, 2021

Go-Go Music Photography, Historical Inflation Data, T-Mobile, More: Thursday ResearchBuzz, August 19, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

DCist: A New Photo Collection Adds Nearly 2,000 Images To The D.C. Public Library’s Go-Go Archive. “The D.C. Public Library’s Go-Go Archive is a digital and physical resource full of books, magazines, records, cassette tapes, DVDs, and 10,000 tweets about the Don’t Mute DC movement. But since it was established in 2012, the collection has suffered from an acute lack of photos capturing the culture surrounding the music — and even the bands that produced it.That’s changing this week, as the D.C. Public Library is adding nearly 2,000 photos that portray a decade of performances and behind-the-scenes moments shared by legendary go-go musicians and fans alike.” Seeing this new resource immediately reminded me of a Washingtonian article I indexed a couple of years ago.

Vox EU: One-stop source for inflation: Introducing a new database. “Understanding the dynamics of inflation requires a comprehensive database that covers a large number of countries over a long period. This column introduces a new global database of inflation that has a significantly larger coverage than other databases as it includes multiple measures of inflation for up to 196 countries over 1970-2021. The database can be used in a variety of contexts.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Engadget: T-Mobile confirms data breach affects over 47 million people. “As part of its ongoing data breach investigation, T-Mobile has confirmed the enormity of the stolen information. Roughly 47.8 million current and former or prospective customers have been affected by the cyberattack on its systems, the carrier confirmed on Wednesday. Of that number, about 7.8 million are current T-Mobile postpaid accounts and the rest are prior or potential users who had applied for credit, the company added in a press release.”

SEO Roundtable: Google Local Result With Reviews From The Web & Independent Sites. “Google seems to be testing a new way of showing reviews in the local listing for some businesses. Brandon Schmidt spotted Google showing not just the number of reviews with the review summary in stars, but where Google labels if the reviews are ‘from the web’ or from ‘independent sites.'” Apparently you can’t click it, it’s just a piece of data. What’s the point?

USEFUL STUFF

PC World: This free Windows text tool will change the way you type. “For a while, I used a program called PhaseExpress for text shortcuts. It didn’t always work reliably, and I got tired of its periodic nags to pay for unnecessary extra features. Earlier this year, I started looking for text expander alternatives, which led me to a brilliant app—with an even more brilliant name—called Beeftext.”

Smashing Magazine: Free Open-Source Icons. “In this post, we’ll celebrate some of these wonderful freebies that we came across recently. All of these free icons, illustrations, avatars, and animations have slightly different licenses (so please check them), but they are free to use in private and commercial work. But of course, the credit is always much appreciated.” Extensive!

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Poynter: Fake news accounts are spreading false information about journalists executed in Afghanistan. “Several Twitter accounts that look like they belong to some well-known news networks recently shared that a journalist had been captured and killed by the Taliban in Kabul. But these accounts weren’t authentic and they’ve since been suspended.”

The Guardian: Social networks struggle to crack down on ‘incel’ movement. “Despite years of strict moderation from the main social networks, the ‘incel’ community remains as influential as it was in 2014, when an English 22-year-old killed seven people on the streets of Isla Vista, California, motivated by his hatred of women.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

NBC 4 Washington: DC Tunnel History Site Flagged Suspicious Activity Before Capitol Insurrection. “The founder and administrator of an obscure website about underground infrastructure in Washington, D.C., saw a sudden and suspicious spike in traffic in the days before the U.S. Capitol insurrection. The sharp increase in web visitors alarmed the site’s operator so much that he contacted the FBI. Elliot Carter, who operates the site, worried people were covertly seeking escape routes or entry points to the Capitol ahead of the electoral college count in January.”

Associated Press: Following protests, Cuba lays out laws on social media use. “Cuba’s government on Tuesday spelled out its laws against using social media or the internet to stir up protests or insult the state — and offered people a form to report offenders. The decrees published in the Official Gazette follow the largest protests Cuba has seen in years, which broke out last month and apparently were fed in part by messages on social media applications.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

The Next Web: Researchers fooled AI into ignoring stop signs using a cheap projector. “A trio of researchers at Purdue today published pre-print research demonstrating a novel adversarial attack against computer vision systems that can make an AI see – or not see – whatever the attacker wants. It’s something that could potentially affect self-driving vehicles, such as Tesla’s, that rely on cameras to navigate and identify objects.”

Michigan State University: File not found: Biodiversity needs better data archiving. “Missing metadata — data that provides information about other data — might not sound like a big deal, but it’s a costly problem that’s hindering humanity’s plans to protect the planet’s biodiversity. ‘The way I see it, it’s pretty simple,’ said Rachel Toczydlowski, a postdoctoral researcher in Michigan State University’s College of Natural Science. ‘If we want to monitor and conserve global genetic diversity — the most fundamental level of biodiversity — we need to improve our data archiving practices ASAP.'” Good morning, Internet…

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August 19, 2021 at 05:33PM
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