Monday, August 23, 2021

Monday CoronaBuzz, August 23, 2021: 89 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Monday CoronaBuzz, August 23, 2021: 89 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.
By ResearchBuzz

Split up more categories and still working on the workflow. 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

5 News (Arkansas): Over 1,300 active COVID cases reported in Arkansas schools as students return to class. “The Arkansas Department of Health (ADH) has released a new tool that keeps track of the number of active COVID-19 cases within school districts across Arkansas. As of August 16, Arkansas public schools are reporting 1,347 active COVID cases of students and faculty.”

USEFUL STUFF

Lifehacker: How to Choose the Right Face Mask for a Flight so You Aren’t Turned Away. “The last thing you need right now is to show up at the airport and get turned away from your flight because you have the wrong type of mask. These rules are constantly changing, but here’s what we know for now, courtesy of an article by Alison Fox in Travel + Leisure.”

Miami Herald: These resources are available to Miami-Dade residents who are struggling financially. “The COVID pandemic has brought an unprecedented demand for assistance in South Florida. Here’s where you can get help if you are a Miami or Miami-Dade resident.”

UPDATES

AL: ‘Everything is so desperate’: Inside the surge as COVID overwhelms south Alabama. “Greg Darden had big plans for his 50th year. For years, he lifted weights and cut carbs, chiseling his physique to high definition. He took it to body building competitions across the South, first as a contestant and then as an organizer and judge. After years in the background, he planned to compete again in the master’s division for body builders ages 50 and older in 2022, his wife said. But instead, he spent his 50th birthday in the emergency room, waiting to be admitted to Thomas Hospital.”

Business Insider: A year and a half after Sweden decided not to lock down, its COVID-19 death rate is up to 10 times higher than its neighbors. “Sweden has recorded more COVID-19 cases per capita than most countries so far: Since the start of the pandemic, roughly 11 out of every 100 people in Sweden have been diagnosed with COVID-19, compared with 9.4 out of every 100 in the UK and 7.4 per 100 in Italy. Sweden has also recorded around 145 COVID-19 deaths for every 100,000 people — around three times more than Denmark, eight times more than Finland, and nearly 10 times more than Norway.”

Beckley Register-Herald: Covid cases still climbing in W.Va.. “Covid-19 cases in West Virginia continued to climb on Friday with a reported 911 new cases, 8,806 active cases, seven deaths and a positive test rate of 9.26 percent.”

Tasnim News Agency: COVID-19 Kills 555 More Iranians Over Past 24 Hours. “Over the last 24 hours, 28,833 new cases of COVID-19 infection were discovered, with 4,064 of them requiring hospitalization, according to the report. The Iranian Health Ministry also noted that 3,868,196 people have recovered or been discharged from hospitals out of a total of 4,616,516 sick people.”

MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

CNN: Fact check: Texas lieutenant governor falsely implies Black people to blame for Covid surge. “The blame game over rising cases of Covid-19 continues along largely partisan lines, with Democrats attacking GOP governors who have banned measures like mask mandates and vaccine passports, and Republicans blaming the Biden administration’s border policy for the uptick in cases. The attacks heated up Thursday when Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick claimed that African Americans were to blame for the ever-increasing wave of coronavirus cases.”

Media Matters: TikTok’s algorithm is amplifying COVID-19 and vaccine misinformation. “TikTok’s algorithm appears to be promoting COVID-19 and vaccine misinformation to its users through personalized content recommendations, enabling conspiracy theories and medical misinformation to flourish on its platform. ”

UC Riverside: Data mining tools combat COVID-19 misinformation and identify symptoms. “UC Riverside computer scientists are developing tools to help track and monitor COVID-19 symptoms and to sift through misinformation about the disease on social media.”

BBC: Wuhan lab leak theory: How Fort Detrick became a centre for Chinese conspiracies. “A disinformation campaign claiming that the Covid-19 virus originated from an American military base in Maryland has gained popularity in China ahead of the release of a US intelligence report on the virus origins.”

New York Times: Health officials warn people not to treat Covid with a drug meant for livestock.. “Ivermectin, an anti-parasitic drug commonly used for livestock, should not be taken to treat or prevent Covid-19, the Food and Drug Administration said on Saturday. The warning came a day after the Mississippi State Department of Health issued a similar statement in response to reports that an increasing number of people in Mississippi were using the drug to prevent a Covid infection.”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

WRAL: Pandemic fiction: Fall books include stories of the virus . “From wars to plagues to the Sept. 11 attacks, the literary response to historic tragedies has been a process of absorbing trauma — often beginning with poetry and nonfiction and, after months or years, expanding to narrative fiction. The pandemic has now lasted into a second fall season for publishing, and a growing number of authors, among them Picoult, Louise Erdrich, Gary Shteyngart and Hilma Wolitzer, have worked it into their latest books.”

Route Fifty: The Coronavirus Is Here Forever. This Is How We Live With It.. “Endemicity as the COVID-19 endgame seems quite clear, but how we get there is less so. In part, that is because the path depends on us. As my colleague Ed Yong has written, the eventuality of endemic COVID-19 does not mean we should drop all precautions. The more we can flatten the curve now, the less hospitals will become overwhelmed and the more time we buy to vaccinate the unvaccinated, including children. Letting the virus rip through unvaccinated people may get us to endemicity quickest, but it will also kill the most people along the way.”

ACTIVISM / PROTESTS

BBC: Covid: Australian police clash with anti-lockdown protesters. “Police in the Australian cities of Melbourne and Sydney have clashed with thousands of people protesting against Covid lockdowns. In Melbourne, mounted officers used pepper spray when elements of a 4,000-strong rally broke through police lines. Police arrested 218 people, and at least seven officers were injured.”

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

Missouri State School of Nursing: Christina shares her experience in the Medical ICU. “I have watched and listened to so many patients saying goodbye to their crying families, unable to say everything they wanted to or needed to, because of the huge force of air being blown into their lungs from the bi-pap machine. I’ve watched their noses turn blue and their fingers turn black as they wave goodbye in tears. As soon as this happens, things move forward quickly.” Almost everything in this digest is a difficult read. This is especially so.

STAT: ‘It’s soul-draining’: Health workers deployed to Covid hot zones are overwhelmed by deaths among the unvaccinated. “Bren Ingle watched through a set of twin glass doors as her patient drew his final, halting breaths, a terrifyingly long pause separating each one. She could hear every haunted exhalation he made, a sound halfway between a snore and a scream of pain. It was not her first such vigil. But the knowledge that the patient was unvaccinated made it, somehow, bleaker than the rest.

BBC: India vaccination drive picks up pace amid fears of third wave. “On Tuesday, the country administered more than 8.81 million doses in 24 hours – the highest daily jabs since vaccinations began in January, the government said. But only 13% of the eligible population – nearly a billion – has been fully vaccinated so far, leaving majority of the people still vulnerable.”

WJCT: COVID Antibody Treatments Get Underway At Jacksonville’s Main Library. “The Regeneron monoclonal antibody treatment site at the Downtown Jacksonville Main Library opened Tuesday morning, offering a COVID-19 treatment option with no doctor referral needed. Monoclonal antibodies are a treatment authorized by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) under an Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) for use in adult and pediatric patients (12 and older). ”

Washington Post: ‘I’m begging you. … Take that shot.’. “Even at the most urgent of moments, it was the most ordinary of questions because of what the doctor understood: that if Alabama had any chance of turning things around at this point, it was no longer a matter of what Dr. Fauci said on CNN, or what some celebrity posted on Twitter but rather what was about to happen now, a delicate conversation between a doctor and a patient, the vaccines in a cooler down the hall just in case. Between [Dr. Lacy] Smith and two colleagues, there were 10 unvaccinated people on the schedule this day, and the first was Potts.”

Tampa Bay Times: Florida’s COVID deaths climb as children lead state in positivity rate. “Florida’s pandemic is getting deadlier and infecting more children. The state reported 1,486 deaths, a 141 percent increase from two weeks ago. And it’s the most deaths since Feb. 10, as federal data shows Florida approaching the weekly death toll last seen this past winter. One out of every four COVID-19 infections recorded by the state in the most recent seven-day period were 19 or younger.”

Health System Tracker: Most private insurers are no longer waiving cost-sharing for COVID-19 treatment. “In the last few months, the environment has shifted with safe and highly effective vaccines now widely available. In this brief, we once again review how many private insurers are continuing to waive patient cost sharing for COVID-19 treatment. We find that 72% of the two largest insurers in each state and DC (102 health plans) are no longer waiving these costs, and another 10% of plans are phasing out waivers by the end of October.”

HEALTH CARE – PEDIATRICS

NBC News: Child Covid-19 hospitalizations soar, filling pediatric wings, data show. “It happened fast: As of Wednesday, U.S. hospitals were tending to an average of more than 1,200 children a day, twice the number from the end of July and four times from the start of July, according to an NBC News analysis of data released this week by the Department of Health and Human Services.”

Wall Street Journal: More Kids Are Hospitalized With Covid-19, and Doctors Fear It Will Get Worse. “Hospitals in the South and Midwest say they are treating more children with Covid-19 than ever and are preparing for worse surges to come. Cases there have jumped over the past six weeks as the highly contagious Delta variant spreads primarily among unvaccinated people. That is leading to more sick kids in places where community spread of the variant is high, public-health experts say.”

HEALTH CARE – CAPACITY

AL: Federal team coming to Alabama to help Baldwin County hospital swamped by COVID-19. “Alabama State Health Officer Dr. Scott Harris announced that today at his weekly briefing on the COVID-19 pandemic. The team from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services will be deployed at South Baldwin Regional Medical Center in Foley, Harris said. The hospital had an occupancy rate of 190% in its ICU as of Aug. 12.”

ABC 7: Sarasota Memorial Hospital hits record number of COVID cases, ICU patients rising. “According to the Coronavirus Daily News Update webpage on SMH’s website, as of Friday, there are 256 patients in the hospital with COVID. 54 of those patients are in the ICU. On Thursday, hospital officials reported that 86% of the COVID-19 cases at the hospital are those who are unvaccinated. The ICU currently has 85 patients in total, with a capacity of 97. The hospital currently has a total of 797 patients with a total capacity of 839 beds.”

WRAL: With no beds, hospitals ship patients to far-off cities. “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.”

Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Georgia nursing shortage at crisis levels. “In a state that already had one of the nation’s lowest ratios of nurses to population, job postings for nurses jumped by double-digit percentages in each of its regions in 2020, then jumped again. As of this week, 11,000 nursing positions across the state sit vacant, according to the nursing job service Vivian. More than 1,700 of those are in intensive care units.”

Click2Houston: ‘I’ve never seen anything like this’: ER doctor says hundreds of patients are waiting to be admitted into hospitals, but there are no beds. “Emergency room doctors in Southeast Texas say they are running out of hospital beds, and some patients are waiting hours, sometimes days to be admitted into a hospital…. As of Friday afternoon, [Southeast Texas Regional Advisory Council CEO Darrell] Pile says 482 patients were waiting for hospital beds in his 25-county region. He said 211 of those patients are COVID-19 positive. An additional 120 patients are waiting for an ICU bed. Of those patients, 65 are COVID-19 positive.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

New York Times: Maker of Popular Covid Test Told Factory to Destroy Inventory. “One of the leading producers of rapid tests purged supplies and laid off workers as sales dwindled. Weeks later, the U.S. is facing a surge in infections with diminished capacity.”

NBC News: Don’t duct tape unruly passengers, United Airlines says in memo to employees. “Unruly passengers may have been duct taped to their seats on other carriers, but United Airlines officials want to make clear that they do not endorse the practice. ‘Please remember that there are designated items onboard that may be used in difficult situations, and alternative measures such as tape should never be used,’ John Slater, senior vice president of inflight services, told employees in a Friday memo.”

UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

AP: Biden to require COVID vaccines for nursing home staff. “President Joe Biden on Wednesday announced that his administration will require that nursing home staff be vaccinated against COVID-19 as a condition for those facilities to continue receiving federal Medicare and Medicaid funding. Biden unveiled the new policy Wednesday afternoon in a White House address as the administration continues to look for ways to use mandates to encourage vaccine holdouts to get shots.”

New York Times: The F.D.A. is aiming to give full approval to Pfizer’s Covid vaccine on Monday.. “The Food and Drug Administration is pushing to approve Pfizer-BioNTech’s two-dose Covid-19 vaccine on Monday, further expediting an earlier timeline for licensing the shot, according to people familiar with the agency’s planning.”

Washington Post: Four weeks in July: Inside the Biden administration’s struggle to contain the delta surge. “Early last month, as the planned Fourth of July blowout at the White House approached, top health officials inside the Biden administration began calling each other with a flurry of anxious questions. Would the president declare victory too soon? Would the event be seen as beating a virus that was not yet defeated? And would the massive party, with 1,000 guests, contribute to the virus’s spread?”

NPR: The U.S. Is Trying To Improve Relations With Southeast Asia — Using Western Vaccines. “U.S. vaccine diplomacy is in full swing, especially in Southeast Asia. This distribution of millions of shots is an effort aimed in part at helping regain influence across several countries.”

ProPublica: The CDC Only Tracks a Fraction of Breakthrough COVID-19 Infections, Even as Cases Surge. “A May 1 decision by the CDC to only track breakthrough infections that lead to hospitalization or death has left the nation with a muddled understanding of COVID-19’s impact on the vaccinated.”

WORLD/COUNTRY GOVERNMENT

Times of Israel: In world first, Health Ministry approves COVID boosters to all Israelis over 40. “The Health Ministry announced Friday that its director-general Nachman Ash had approved giving COVID-19 vaccine boosters to all Israelis over the age of 40. The decision came after a government advisory panel of health experts made the recommendation Thursday evening.”

BBC: Covid: New Zealand pandemic strategy in doubt amid Delta spread. “The arrival of the highly infectious Delta variant “does raise some big questions” about New Zealand’s pandemic response, a minister has said. Covid-19 response minister Chris Hipkins said the variant ‘changes the game considerably’ and makes existing protections ‘look less adequate’ It comes as the country announced a further 21 confirmed cases in the latest outbreak of the virus.”

STATE GOVERNMENT

WDIO: Minnesota State Fair finalizes health guidelines ahead of opening day. “The Minnesota State Fair has finalized their health recommendations ahead of it’s opening, which is now just over a week away. As of a release on August 18th, fair officials are urging fairgoers to wear a mask in both indoor and outdoor settings regardless of vaccination. That recommendation applies to those older than age two and who are medically able to wear one.”

Politico: Kentucky governor suffers legal defeat in combating Covid surge . “The Kentucky governor’s efforts to aggressively combat COVID-19 suffered a legal defeat Saturday as the state’s high court cleared the way for new laws to rein in his emergency powers. In a landmark separation-of-powers case, the Kentucky Supreme Court said the legislature wields policy-making authority to limit the emergency powers granted to the governor by state law.”

Business Insider: Louisiana attorney general gave parents sample letters to help their children skirt mask-wearing guidance in schools. “The attorney general of Louisiana drafted and distributed sample letters intended to help parents evade mask-wearing ordinances and COVID-19 vaccination requirements for their children in schools. Earlier this month, Attorney General Jeff Landry posted the letters to his office’s Facebook page. The letters cite philosophical or religious motivations as reasons for a parent to get their child a mask exemption in a Louisiana school. ”

NBC News: Mississippi threatens fines, jail time for Covid patients who don’t isolate. “State Health Officer Dr. Thomas Dobbs issued an ‘isolation order’ that states, ‘All persons residing in Mississippi must immediately home-isolate on first knowledge of infection with COVID-19.’ Failure to do so could result in fines and jail time. Dobbs’ order mentions two possible levels of violation. One, a refusal to obey a health officer, comes with a $500 fine and, possibly, six months behind bars.”

STATE GOVERNMENT – FLORIDA

WTSP: Judge denies motion to dismiss lawsuit challenging Gov. DeSantis’ school mask mandate ban. “A Florida judge ruled Thursday to deny the state’s motion to dismiss a lawsuit filed by several Tampa Bay area attorneys to challenge Gov. Ron DeSantis’ ban on mask mandates in schools.”

Washington Post: In Florida, DeSantis cut jobless aid just as virus began terrifying new wave. “[Meli] Feliciano and her family have been thrust squarely into a vast social, political and economic experiment that has no parallel or precedent. DeSantis and 25 other governors nationwide, all but one of them Republican, opted this spring and summer to reject extra federal aid intended for people who lost their jobs because of the coronavirus, contending that the more robust social safety net was leading to widespread labor shortages. But the coronavirus’s deadly delta variant, which has overwhelmed Florida in recent weeks, shows just how fragile the economic recovery still is.”

AP: AP urges DeSantis to end bullying aimed at reporter. “Twitter suspended the account of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ press secretary for violating rules on ‘abusive behavior’ after The Associated Press said her conduct led to a reporter receiving threats and other online abuse. The DeSantis aide, Christina Pushaw, saw her account locked for 12 hours, a Twitter spokeswoman said. She won’t be able to tweet, although others can retweet or ‘like’ her messages.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

Orlando Sentinel: Orlando urges reduced water usage; liquid oxygen used to treat water is needed for COVID patients. “The city of Orlando and its water utility on Friday appealed to residents to cut back sharply on water usage for at least several weeks because of a pandemic-triggered shortage of liquid oxygen used to treat water. Orlando Utilities Commission consumes 10 tankers of liquid oxygen each week to remove odor and color from water. A sharp increase in the usage of liquid oxygen by hospitals in treating COVID-19 patients has resulted in short supplies for other uses.”

WRAL: Charlotte-area fire department shutting down due to COVID-19 cases. “A Rowan County Fire Department is temporarily shutting down after multiple reported COVID-19 cases within the department’s staff.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

ABC News: COVID patient seen on floor of Florida antibody treatment site says she was afraid to ‘run out of breath’. “Toma Dean had been in and out of the emergency room for the past two weeks, “extremely sick” with COVID-19, when she arrived at a Jacksonville, Florida, monoclonal antibody treatment center on Wednesday. Because standing for too long left her feeling breathless, Dean made the decision to lie down on the floor of the makeshift treatment center until her appointment….While Dean was waiting, a fellow patient took a photo of her. The image was shared online, and subsequently went viral on social media.”

Hollywood Reporter: Florida Georgia Line Cancels Tour Due to COVID-19 Concerns: “Safety Has Been Weighing Heavy on Us”. “Grammy-nominated country music duo Florida Georgia Line have announced their I Love My Country tour has been canceled due to concerns over the spread of the COVID-19 virus on Friday. The 29-date arena and amphitheater tour was set to kick off on Sept. 24 at the Cellairis Amphitheater in Atlanta. ”

NBC News: Garth Brooks cancels 5 shows, cites ‘new wave’ of Covid. “Country superstar Garth Brooks pulled the plug Wednesday on five coming shows because of the country’s struggle with Covid-19 and the new surge brought about by the delta variant of the coronavirus.”

NBC News: Jesse Jackson and wife, Jacqueline, ‘responding positively’ to Covid-19 treatment. “The Rev. Jesse Jackson and his wife, Jacqueline, are ‘responding positively’ to medical treatment after having been hospitalized with Covid-19, their family said Sunday.”

AP: At 60, Peace Corps plots return to world after virus hiatus. “More than a year after COVID-19 began sweeping the world, abruptly cutting short her Peace Corps stint, Cameron Beach is once again living in rural Malawi — this time on her own dime. The Peace Corps, a U.S. government program marking its 60th anniversary this year, boasted 7,000 volunteers in 62 countries in March 2020. They were given little time to pack before being put on a plane and sent back to the United States that month.”

Spectrum News 1: Texas congressman Nehls says he tested positive for COVID-19. “U.S. Rep. Troy Nehls of Texas says that he’s tested positive for COVID-19 and has moderate symptoms. Nehls, a Republican from the Houston area, said Saturday that he is fully vaccinated and hopes the symptoms pass soon.”

INDIVIDUALS – HEROES

New Zealand Herald: Coronavirus Australia: How The Wiggles help save life of Covid 19 patient with Down syndrome. “Sarah Kelly, who has Down syndrome, was in the intensive care unit with Covid-19, struggling to breathe. However, The Wiggles’ fan kept refusing to have oxygen tubes put in As her condition began to deteriorate rapidly, ICU nurse Steven Moylan, who had witnessed Kelly watching the group on her iPad regularly, took it upon himself to track them down and ask them for help.”

INDIVIDUALS – DEATHS

ABC News: Unvaccinated single mom dies of COVID-19, leaving 4 children behind. “Cindy Dawkins was celebrating her 50th birthday in Orlando earlier this month when family members said she began to feel tired and short of breath. Just a week later, Dawkins, of Boynton Beach, Florida, passed away due to complications from COVID-19, according to her family.”

CNN: Conservative talk show host Phil Valentine dies after battle with Covid-19, his employer says. “His death comes more than a month after the host first announced he had been diagnosed with Covid-19. On his program, Valentine had repeatedly downplayed the importance of getting a vaccine against the virus, saying last December that he believed his personal odds of dying from Covid-19 were ‘probably way less than one percent.'”

KSLA: Family mourns mother, daughter who died one day apart due to COVID-19. “A family is mourning after COVID-19 caused a mother and daughter to lose their lives just one day apart. A routine pregnancy checkup for 21-year-old Lacresanna Williams took a turn when she tested positive for COVID-19.”

Bottom Line News: Former state Rep. Brent Yonts passes away from COVID-19. “Former Kentucky state Rep. Brent Yonts passed away Friday after a long battle with COVID-19, despite being fully vaccinated. According to posts from his daughter and state Senator Whitney Westerfield, Yonts had been in critical condition and in the ICU for two weeks before being placed on a ventilator earlier this week.”

New York Daily News: Five South Florida cops die in a single week of COVID-19: report. “The novel coronavirus has become a leading killer of police officers across the U.S., with five South Florida police officers succumbing to COVID-19 in a single week, according to several police departments.”

SPORTS

CBS: Las Vegas Raiders to make fans prove they’ve been vaccinated. “Starting at the Raiders’ September 13 game against the Baltimore Ravens, fans will be required to prove they’ve been vaccinated. Then, they won’t have to wear masks – the first policy of its kind in the NFL.”

BBC: Tokyo 2020: First Covid case detected at Paralympic village. “The person who tested positive for the virus is not an athlete and is not a resident of Japan, they added. Organisers have already reported more than 70 Covid cases linked to the Paralympics, mostly among contractors and staff.”

K-12 EDUCATION

New York Times: As Childhood Covid Cases Spike, School Vaccination Clinics Are Slow Going. “Districts are heeding President Biden’s call to host pop-up vaccination clinics. But promoting vaccines is politically difficult, and persuading parents isn’t easy.”

AP: Arizona school board imposes gag rule for vaccines, masks. “Employees in a northwestern Arizona school district cannot discuss vaccination status or mask-wearing with students under a motion approved unanimously by the local school board.”

NPR: Moms Describe Preparing For Another Pandemic School Year. “One year ago, August 2020, I got on the phone with some other moms. We were all staring down the back-to-school season in the middle of a pandemic. Our kids were reporting to school in their pajamas in front of a laptop. Well, somehow we all managed to navigate an academic year like no other – same for teachers, who we heard from on the program yesterday. Today we are going to check back with a couple of those moms, share some thoughts as we gear up once again for a school year that is not looking normal. Dominique Spencer, you first. You have two kids. You run a child care center in Washington, D.C. What grade are your kids now going into?” 8 minutes of audio with transcript.

AP: Bus driver shortages are latest challenge hitting US schools. “A Montana school district is dangling $4,000 bonuses and inviting people to test drive big yellow school buses in hopes of enticing them to take a job that schools are struggling to fill as kids return to in-person classes. A Delaware school district offered to pay parents $700 to take care of their own transportation, and a Pittsburgh district delayed the start of classes and said hundreds more children would have to walk to school. Schools across the U.S. are offering hiring bonuses, providing the training needed to get a commercial driver’s license and increasing hourly pay to attract more drivers.”

NBC News: Texas school district makes masks part of dress code to get around Gov. Abbott’s order. “A small Texas school district has made facial coverings part of its dress code, in a bid to get around Gov. Greg Abbott’s executive order banning mask mandates. The board of the Paris Independent School District, which has about 4,000 students, said in a statement Tuesday that the governor’s order does not usurp its ability to manage schools.”

K-12 EDUCATION – FLORIDA

Tampa Bay Times: Hillsborough School Board votes to require masks for students, staff. “Confronted with rising numbers of COVID-19 cases on its campuses, the Hillsborough County School Board voted Wednesday to require that students, teachers and staff wear masks for the next 30 days, starting Thursday. Students can opt out, but only for medical reasons.”

Politico: Sarasota becomes first Trump county to defy DeSantis on school masks. “By a 3-2 vote that came late Friday night, Sarasota’s board became the sixth in Florida to mandate masks and the first in a GOP-county to defy state laws blocking local Covid-19 requirements. Parents and local residents showed up in droves to protest the decision, telling the board they were ‘disgusted’ and ‘mad as heck’ over their ‘medical tyranny’ during a tense five-hour meeting where multiple people were kicked out for disruptions.”

CNN: Ron DeSantis leans into mask-mandate fights as Covid cases soar in Florida. “As the number of new coronavirus cases in his state soars, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is betting that an aggressive campaign against mandatory mask-wearing in schools will harden the Republican base ahead of his expected re-election bid next year — and make him a GOP star nationwide as the party’s 2024 presidential primary comes into view.”

CNN: Florida Board of Education orders Broward, Alachua counties to allow mask opt-out in 48 hours or start losing funding. “The Florida State Board of Education has sent an order to Broward and Alachua counties’ school board officials stating that they have 48 hours to comply with the state’s wishes to allow an opt-out option for masks or the state will begin withholding funds, according to copies of the orders shown to CNN.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

WRAL: Photos tweeted by UNC-Chapel Hill spark concern over virus; university steps up testing of unvaccinated students. “The Twitter post shows students lining up to take part in a university tradition – drinking water from the Old Well on campus on the first day of classes. The students waiting in line were wearing masks, but dozens of people commented, expressing concern that everyone was drinking from the same fountain while the highly contagious coronavirus Delta variant spreads.”

Virginian-Pilot: University of Virginia disenrolls 238 students for not complying with vaccine requirement. ” The University of Virginia disenrolled 238 students ahead of its fall semester for noncompliance with the school’s COVID-19 vaccine requirement. Of that number, 49 were enrolled in fall courses — meaning that ‘a good number’ of the remaining students ‘may not have been planning to return to the University this fall at all,’ U.Va. spokesperson Brian Coy said in an email to The Virginian-Pilot.”

If you’ve been reading the articles going around that Rice had a ton of breakthrough infections, please read this. Rice University: COVID-19 Response weekly update: August 22. “We’ve discovered some anomalies with the test results we received this week from one of our three providers. I’m going to explain in detail what we’ve discovered and how we discovered it, but the bottom line is this: Dozens of people whose initial tests showed them to be COVID-positive have been retested twice and all but one of those have turned out to be negative.”

HEALTH

National Geographic: Evidence mounts that people with breakthrough infections can spread Delta easily. “A preliminary study has shown that in the case of a breakthrough infection, the Delta variant is able to grow in the noses of vaccinated people to the same degree as if they were not vaccinated at all. The virus that grows is just as infectious as that in unvaccinated people, meaning vaccinated people can transmit the virus and infect others.”

Fin 24: 80% of South Africans may have had Covid-19, Discovery says. “As many as four out of five South Africans may have contracted the coronavirus, indicating that the country may be one of the world’s hardest-hit nations by the disease, the chief actuary at Discovery said. Emile Stipp based his calculations on the country’s case-fatality rate and excess deaths, a measure of the number of fatalities compared with an historical average. They are thought to provide a more accurate picture of the impact of the pandemic than the official toll.”

TECHNOLOGY

KnowTechie: You can now store your COVID-19 vaccination card on Samsung phones. “As more and more people are getting the COVID-19 vaccination, smartphone manufacturers have been working on ways to story vaccination information easily on users’ smartphones. Samsung has become the latest manufacturer to jump on board, announcing the COVID vaccination cards are now available on your smartphone through Samsung Pay.”

Women Love Tech: Why COVID-19 Has Accelerated The Need For Open Data Sources. “Open banking guru and Head of Product for Envestnet | Yodlee, Tonia Berglund and Jamie Leach from global open banking industry body FData, are leading the way for Australia’s open banking sector. We sat down with both Tonia and Jamie to discuss the recent developments in Australia’s open banking regime, including the recent change by the Treasury to amend the Consumer Data Right (CDR), giving consumers greater access to, and control over, their data.”

RESEARCH

Reuters: Israel Finds COVID-19 Vaccine Booster Significantly Lowers Infection Risk. “A third dose of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine has significantly improved protection from infection and serious illness among people age 60 and older in Israel compared with those who received two shots, findings published on Sunday by the Health Ministry showed.”

Nature: The mutation that helps Delta spread like wildfire. “As the world grapples with the hyper-infectious Delta coronavirus variant, scientists are racing to understand the biological basis for its behaviour. A slew of studies has highlighted an amino-acid change present in Delta that might contribute to its swift spread. Delta is at least 40% more transmissible than is the Alpha variant identified in the United Kingdom in late 2020, epidemiological studies suggest.”

New York Times: A microscopic video shows the coronavirus on the rampage.. “The intruder stalks its prey with stealth and precision, preparing to puncture its quarry’s armor. Once inside, the aggressor forces its host to produce more intruders, and then causes it to explode, spewing out a multitude of invaders who can continue their rampage on a wider scale. The drama, depicted in a microscopic video of SARS-CoV-2 infecting bat brain cells, provides a window into how the pathogen turns cells into virus-making factories before causing the host cell to die.”

PUBLIC OPINION:

AP: COVID anxiety rising amid delta surge, AP-NORC poll finds. ” Anxiety in the United States over COVID-19 is at its highest level since winter, a new poll shows, as the delta variant rages, more states and school districts adopt mask and vaccination requirements and the nation’s hospitals once again fill to capacity.”

CRIME / SECURITY / LEGAL

Radio Free Asia: Researchers Jailed Over Github Stash of Pandemic Content Banned in China. “Two Chinese researchers who kept an online repository of banned articles on the coronavirus pandemic have been sentenced, then released, by a court in Beijing. Chen Mei, 28, and Cai Wei, 27, were found guilty on by the Chaoyang District People’s Court on Aug. 13 of ‘picking quarrels and stirring up trouble,’ a charge frequently used to target peaceful critics of the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP).”

OH THAT’S SO NICE

Washington Post: A goofy paper horse became an Australian pandemic sensation. Now he’s going in a museum . “The National Museum of Australia houses hundreds of years of the country’s history, from Aboriginal artifacts to Capt. James Cook’s navigational instruments. Soon, the sprawling institution on the edge of a lake in central Canberra will get a new addition: a paper horse named Russell. The nearly life-size stallion became a national — neigh, international — sensation this year when David Marriott pieced him together while in hotel quarantine. The 58-year-old also created an alter ego, known as the Quarantine Cowboy, whose adventures with the horse were an online hit.”

OPINION

Washington Post: Opinion: When culture wars turn deadly. “There have always been anti-vaxxers. But attitudes toward this round of vaccinations are so embedded in tribal conflict that persuasion on the merits is, if not impossible — the threat of the delta variant has changed some minds — then far more difficult than it should be. Culture wars are like that. They shut down conversation.”

New York Times: Dying in the Name of Vaccine Freedom. “In the video above, Alexander Stockton, a producer on the Opinion Video team, explores one of the main reasons the number of Covid cases is soaring once again in the United States: vaccine hesitancy and refusal. ‘It’s hard to watch the pandemic drag on as Americans refuse the vaccine in the name of freedom,’ he says. Seeking understanding, Mr. Stockton travels to Mountain Home, Ark., in the Ozarks, a region with galloping contagion and — not unrelated — abysmal vaccination rates.” This is mostly video but all the spot-checks I did had captions.

RELIGION

Washington Post: Philadelphia becomes latest archdiocese to reject religious exemptions for vaccine mandates. “The Archdiocese of Philadelphia is the latest district of the Catholic Church to reject religious exemptions to coronavirus vaccination mandates, reflecting a stark divide among the church’s hierarchy over immunization requirements. Church leaders in the nation’s sixth-largest city urged priests Wednesday not to help parishioners evade the shots, which the Vatican has deemed ‘morally acceptable.'”

POLITICS

AL: As Cullman prepares for Trump rally, city declares COVID state of emergency. “With Cullman Regional experiencing overcrowding due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the city of Cullman will be providing more first responders to this weekend’s Alabama GOP rally. The Cullman City Council passed a resolution during a special called meeting Thursday morning to declare a State of Emergency due to threat that COVID-19 continues to pose to the city’s residents.”

Florida Politics: Another poll shows Ron DeSantis’s favorability rating underwater. “Another polling outfit is show Gov. Ron DeSantis’ favorability ratings underwater as Florida endures another surge in Covid-19 infections. The Political Matrix/The Listener Group survey results also show DeSantis trailing either Democrat Charlie Crist or Nikki Fried in a potential matchup for Governor. But the Pensacola-based pollster delivered better news for Republican U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio in his own reelection bid.”

NBC News: Covid got California Gov. Newsom into this recall mess. He’s banking it’ll get him out.. “Covid-19 restrictions got Gavin Newsom into this mess. Now he’s counting on them to get him out of it. Amid a contentious national debate over masks and vaccines, California’s embattled Democratic governor is betting his political life on turning next month’s recall election into a referendum on some of the nation’s strictest mandates.”

CoronaBuzz is brought to you by ResearchBuzz. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you.



August 23, 2021 at 07:07PM
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Arizona State University Map Collection, A World Of Difference, Machine Learning, More: Monday ResearchBuzz, August 23, 2021

Arizona State University Map Collection, A World Of Difference, Machine Learning, More: Monday ResearchBuzz, August 23, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Arizona State University: Mapping the ASU Library map collection. “The 3D Explorer is an interactive 3D web scene that literally maps the ASU Library map collection, the Map and Geospatial Hub. With some powerful search and visualization features, the tool allows anyone, from anywhere in the world, to virtually visit and explore the thousands of maps and other materials housed in the Map and Geospatial Hub as if they were physically located in the space itself.”

Google Blog: Explore our planet’s most unique places and cultures. “Our physical world is changing faster than ever. Climate change and global socio-economic shifts are threatening our magnificent natural landscapes and disrupting small communities. In keeping with this, there is value to be found in confronting and documenting our at-risk environment. For World Photography Day, we invite you to explore A World of Difference, a new online exhibition on Google Arts & Culture offering a perspective of these diverse stories through the lens of Italian photographer Angelo Chiacchio, in collaboration with Art Works for Change.”

EVENTS

The Register: Free machine-learning lessons from The Register – starting with Benford’s distribution . “In our new, free MCubed webcast series, we’ll bring you up to speed with the latest ML development-related tools, libraries, and cloud service news, before jumping into hand-selected expert talks. Through those, practitioners will help you freshen up on the basics, share serviceable advice from their day to day work, and provide insight into the issues they’re trying to solve.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

DigitalNC: Issues from 1951 of the Carolina Times are now on DigitalNC. “Thanks to funding from an IDEA grant from UNC Libraries, the North Carolina Digital Heritage Center is pleased to now have the full run of 1951 issues of the Carolina Times digitized. The issues from 1951 were never microfilmed, so they were not included in previous projects to digitize the newspaper which were done from film.”

Engadget: Facebook releases Q1 ‘widely viewed content’ report following criticism. “… on Friday, the New York Times published a report saying that it had seen a ‘widely viewed content’ report for Q1 of 2021 and that it showed different trends. For example, the most-viewed link was a story claiming a Florida doctor died from the coronovirus vaccine. Facebook has now confirmed the document’s accuracy and released it directly.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Wake County, North Carolina: Wake County Register of Deeds and Shaw University Collaborate to Complete Enslaved Persons Project. “The Wake County Register of Deeds Office and Shaw University are partnering on a project to unlock the secrets of dozens of property deeds to help better reveal the human stories of slavery in our area. The Enslaved Persons Project is a massive effort to catalog, transcribe and make public the records from more than 30 deed books containing bills of sale and property exchanges to allow hundreds of people to track the history of their families.”

Rest of World: “We do not feel safe”: A Kabul-based crisis alert app struggles to protect its own employees. “Ehtesab means “accountability” in Dari and Pashto, and the app, formally launched in March 2020, offers streamlined security-related information, including general security updates in Kabul to its users. With real-time, crowdsourced alerts, users across the city can track bomb blasts, roadblocks, electricity outages, or other problems in locations close to them…. Despite the company’s single-minded focus on security, the Ehtesab team was caught off-guard by the sudden collapse of the Afghan government over the weekend.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Wired: Millions of Web Camera and Baby Monitor Feeds Are Exposed. “A VULNERABILITY IS lurking in numerous types of smart devices—including security cameras, DVRs, and even baby monitors—that could allow an attacker to access live video and audio streams over the internet and even take full control of the gadgets remotely. What’s worse, it’s not limited to a single manufacturer; it shows up in a software development kit that permeates more than 83 million devices, and over a billion connections to the internet each month.”

Politico: Wrangling over Jan. 6 footage could force open congressional records. “Past efforts to use the courts to force disclosure of congressional records like the videos have gotten little traction, but the Jan. 6-related case seizes on an opinion a D.C. Circuit judge issued in June. The new legal fight has the potential to set a new precedent for what kinds of information Congress must disclose, and when — and is squarely aimed at upending decades of law that shielded the institution from public scrutiny.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Boing Boing: Mindblowing AI pixel art. “AI artist dribnet developed an AI that produces remarkably beautiful (and coherent) pixel art based upon text prompts. He’s established an online notebook where you can make your own.” Very cool.

TechCrunch: A mathematician walks into a bar (of disinformation). “What is disinformation? Does it exist, and if so, where is it and how do we know we are looking at it? Should we care about what the algorithms of our favorite platforms show us as they strive to squeeze the prune of our attention? It’s just those sorts of intricate mathematical and social science questions that got Noah Giansiracusa interested in the subject.”

OTHER STUFF I THINK IS COOL

CNET: NASA rover marks nine years on Mars with glorious 360-degree panorama. “Congratulations, Curiosity, you’ve survived and thrived for over nine years on another planet. NASA’s older Martian rover captured a gorgeous 360-degree panorama in early July and the space agency released it on Tuesday to celebrate the vehicle’s August land-iversary.” Good morning, Internet…

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August 23, 2021 at 05:28PM
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Sunday, August 22, 2021

South Korea Censored Films, TweetDeck, Hiking Apps, More: Sunday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 22, 2021

South Korea Censored Films, TweetDeck, Hiking Apps, More: Sunday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 22, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Korea Herald: Politically censored S. Korean films to be released online . “The Korean Film Archive announced that it will sequentially post a collection of South Korea’s earlier films censored by the state through the Korean Movie Database online history archive center, starting Thursday. The KOFA received donations and preserved some 10,000 materials regarding censorship from the Korea Council for Performing Arts Promotion, the predecessor of the current Korea Media Rating Board, from the mid-1950s to the mid-1990s. ”

USEFUL STUFF

Wired: You Should Be Using TweetDeck . “If you’ve never tried TweetDeck, or if you’ve previously used it and since forgotten about it, here are some of its key features—and it might suit you better than the default Twitter web client. As we’ve said Twitter is testing updates to TweetDeck too, so it looks like even more functionality is on the way (and we’re fingers crossed hoping they don’t hobble any already there.)” I love TweetDeck. It’s mostly how I use Twitter. I am very scared of Twitter is going to do to it.

Mashable: 11 best apps for hiking. “Whether gathering supplies for a day hike or setting up camp for a while, these days savvy hikers are sure to pack their digital backpacks with apps to bring out the best in their treks. Don’t forget your gorp, and steer clear of fat bears. Happy trails!”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

News .au: Google Maps has banned mystery Russian island ‘once owned by USA’. “A remote Russian island has sparked mystery after users discovered it is censored on Google Maps. Jeannette Island, in the East Siberian Sea, appears as a black smudge on the search giant’s digital map tool when searching in Satellite mode. It doesn’t appear to show the same smudge when in ‘default’ mode, however.”

PR Newswire: GE Appliances and Google Sign Multi-Year Deal to Build Next-Gen Smart Home Appliances (PRESS RELEASE). “The two companies will work together to develop the next generation of smart appliances with Google Cloud Vision AI. And GEA will benefit from Google Cloud’s seamless integration with other Google platforms and technologies such as Android and Google Assistant.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Bleeping Computer: AT&T denies data breach after hacker auctions 70 million user database. “From the samples shared by the threat actor, the database contains customers’ names, addresses, phone numbers, Social Security numbers, and date of birth. A security researcher who wishes to remain anonymous told BleepingComputer that two of the four people in the samples were confirmed to have accounts on att.com. Other than these few details, not much is known about the database, how it was acquired, and whether it is authentic.”

BuzzFeed News: Big Tech Thought It Had A Billion Users In The Bag. Now It Might Be Forced To Make Hard Choices To Get Them.. “For months, the country’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, led by [Narendra] Modi, a nationalist autocrat accused of reshaping India’s secular ethos into a Hindu state, had been hard at work trying to quell an upswell of criticism on social media after a deadly second wave of the pandemic killed thousands and protests from millions of farmers against new agricultural laws rocked the nation. But it wasn’t until the last week of May that things came to a head.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

The Guardian: Constant craving: how digital media turned us all into dopamine addicts. “According to addiction expert Dr Anna Lembke, our smartphones are making us dopamine junkies, with each swipe, like and tweet feeding our habit. So how do we beat our digital dependency?”

DTU Aqua: Photo posts reveal huge interest for real coastal nature. “Tourists are generating more social media attention about marine protected areas than about other neighbouring coastal areas. In those protected areas they focus more on nature as such, wildlife or wild landscapes, whereas photos from nearby, ‘control’, coastal zones are more focused on human infrastructure like roads, trains, restaurants as well as cultural and historical sites….The photographers also described their photos taken in marine protected areas in a more positive manner than those taken outside MPAs. The social media followers viewing photos of those experiences liked and commented more on MPA photos than they did for non-MPA photos.”

OTHER STUFF I THINK IS COOL

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: The Diversity Story aims to ‘extend valuable cultural education to more people’. “Eleanor Park, 16, of McCandless launched The Diversity Story a year ago. People can apply to be staff writers, be interviewed to have an article written about them, or submit writing, artwork, photography and recipes. So far, the site has published more than 60 personal stories and interviews, as well as more than 20 snippets, or short reads, which usually discuss a current holiday or issue.” 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 23, 2021 at 05:24AM
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Utah Mental Health, Spotify, Amazon Alexa, More: Sunday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 22, 2021

Utah Mental Health, Spotify, Amazon Alexa, More: Sunday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 22, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

KSL TV (Utah): Revamped SafeUT app to help children, adults with ‘any size crisis’. “For six years, the SafeUT app has provided access to mental health resources across the state. Now, administrators said they’ve updated the app to serve even more people The SafeUT app launched its new website with expanded resources on Friday.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Engadget: Spotify and WWE are tag-teaming on podcasts. “WWE and The Ringer (which Spotify bought last year for around $200 million to bolster its sports lineup) are building a podcast network together. The Ringer podcast The Masked Man Show has been rebranded as The Ringer Wrestling Show. More podcasts are on the way, including a narrative series produced by Bill Simmons (a self-professed lifelong WWE fan) and additional shows from WWE talent.”

USEFUL STUFF

Digital Trends: How to use all Amazon Alexa alarm clock features. “Amazon’s Alexa voice assistant has an impressive suite of alarm capabilities, whether you want to set a reminder later in the day or prefer to wake up to certain music or news. We’ll go over everything the Alexa alarm is capable of and how to set things the easy way.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

The Next Web: A brief history of YikYak — the anon platform making its return. “Yik Yak is back! If you don’t know what it is, I don’t blame you. It was an anonymous gossip platform that had some success, but after running into moderation problems and failing to deal with problematic content, it was shut down in 2017. The company announced on Twitter that it’s making a comeback with an iOS app. But before we get into that, let’s take a look at the brief history of the social network.”

ZDNet: How Internet Explorer really beat Netscape . “Here’s the real reason why IE beat Netscape: Microsoft strong-armed PC vendors into putting the new operating system and its browser on all their PCs. The goal was not so much to kill off other PC operating system vendors. There wasn’t any real competition in the mid-90s. The goal was to destroy Netscape.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

TechCrunch: Google says geofence warrants make up one-quarter of all US demands. “The figures, published Thursday, reveal that Google has received thousands of geofence warrants each quarter since 2018, and at times accounted for about one-quarter of all U.S. warrants that Google receives. The data shows that the vast majority of geofence warrants are obtained by local and state authorities, with federal law enforcement accounting for just 4% of all geofence warrants served on the technology giant.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Wired: The Case Against Music Curation. “We are now deep into a decade of lifestyle curation. Our news feeds on Facebook, the movies we catalog on Netflix, the playlists we make and then loop over and over on Apple Music; the need to personalize everything we do, and everything we consume, is meant to remove unnecessary friction from our lives. It’s meant to make things as seamless as possible. Through brainy algorithms and constant curation, singles like ‘Essence’ benefit from that sort of tireless indexing. Eventually, they exist everywhere. But what if that way no longer serves us?”

EurekAlert: UVA research group opens a path toward quantum computing in real-world conditions. “A research team led by Xu Yi, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Virginia School of Engineering and Applied Science, has carved a niche in the physics and applications of photonic devices, which detect and shape light for a wide range of uses including communications and computing. His research group has created a scalable quantum computing platform, which drastically reduces the number of devices needed to achieve quantum speed, on a photonic chip the size of a penny.”

News@Northeastern: You Can’t Determine Emotion From Someone’s Facial Movements–and Neither Can AI. “If you saw a person with their brow furrowed, mouth turned down, and eyes squinted, would you guess they’re angry? What if you found out they’d forgotten their reading glasses and were deciphering a restaurant menu Interpreting a person’s facial movements can’t be done in a vacuum; it depends on the context—something that Northeastern neuroscientist Lisa Feldman Barrett shows in a groundbreaking new study published Thursday in the scientific journal Nature Communications.”

OTHER STUFF I THINK IS COOL

BBC: Nine Afghan girl robotics team members safe in Qatar. “After scrambling for days to bring them to safety, nine members of an Afghan all-girls robotics team have arrived in Qatar, the team’s parent organisation has confirmed.Their flight out of Afghanistan was organised by the Qatar government, which expedited visas and sent an aircraft.The team first made headlines in 2017 after winning a special award at an international robotics competition in the US.” 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 23, 2021 at 12:16AM
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Nebraska Groundwater, Siri, 1996 Presidential Campaign, More: Sunday ResearchBuzz, August 22, 2021

Nebraska Groundwater, Siri, 1996 Presidential Campaign, More: Sunday ResearchBuzz, August 22, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Star Herald (Nebraska): Users can use new website to check groundwater quality, chemical content. “The Nebraska Department of Environment and Energy launched the Nebraska Groundwater Quality Clearinghouse earlier this week. With more than 1.6 million sample results from some 33,000 irrigation well locations, the website is the culmination of decades worth of sampling and research.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

TechCrunch: Apple launches a new iOS app, ‘Siri Speech Study,’ to gather feedback for Siri improvements. “Apple recently began a research study designed to collect speech data from study participants. Earlier this month, the company launched on the App Store a new iOS app called ‘Siri Speech Study’, which allows participants who have opted in to share their voice requests and other feedback with Apple. The app is available in a number of worldwide markets but does not register on the App Store’s charts, including under the ‘Utilities’ category where it’s published.”

Boing Boing: Dole-Kemp ’96 campaign website finally disappears. “The 1996 presidential campaign of Bob Dole was not one for the ages, but its campaign website remained live in perpetuity afterward, a glistening perfect Web 1.0 memento of a bygone age. It was rediscovered this summer, briefly enjoying more attention than it ever likely got 25 years ago.”

CNET: Facebook unveils tools to protect Afghan people who fear becoming Taliban targets . “As many Afghans hurry to hide their social media profiles out of fear the profiles will make them targets for Taliban violence, Facebook is launching new tools to help them delete their digital footprints. The move comes just days after the Taliban reclaimed Kabul, the Afghan capital, on Sunday, and announced they’d be taking power in the country for the first time in 20 years.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

New York Times: Facebook says it wants a ‘fair shot’ in the crypto payments sphere.. Doesn’t Facebook just buy its fair shots? “Facebook’s mission is to ‘bring the world closer together.’ Increasingly, that’s about not just connecting friends and family to share messages, but also serving as a platform for people’s financial lives.”

AP: Film bares disputes behind construction of 9/11 museum. “A new film reveals and renews the tensions that went into creating the Sept. 11 museum beneath the memorial waterfalls and reflecting pool at the World Trade Center Unhappy museum officials have objected and sought changes to ‘The Outsider,’ a documentary being released this week that reveals conflicting visions behind the New York landmark, which opened in 2014.”

Make Tech Easier: Facebook Gaming vs. Twitch vs. YouTube Gaming: What’s the Best Live Game Streaming Platform?. “If you watch games, you have probably used or heard of Twitch, Facebook Gaming, and YouTube Gaming and may be wondering which is the best and how they compare. Here we pit the three titans of game streaming up against one another to decide which is best live game streaming platform.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Sydney Morning Herald: Burden falls on Archives boss to make case for cybersecurity boost. “The head of the National Archives says it falls to him now to make a compelling case to the federal government to secure nearly $170 million to boost the institution’s cybersecurity and digital capability. The government’s long-awaited response to the Tune review of the Archives, revealed in the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age on Thursday, agrees with the need to invest more in cybersecurity and examine the case for a high-tech 5th Generation Digital Archive.

Ars Technica: Apple photo-scanning plan faces global backlash from 90 rights groups. “More than 90 policy groups from the US and around the world signed an open letter urging Apple to drop its plan to have Apple devices scan photos for child sexual abuse material (CSAM).”

Bleeping Computer: You can post LinkedIn jobs as almost ANY employer — so can attackers. “Anyone can create a job listing on the leading recruitment platform LinkedIn on behalf of just about any employer—no verification needed. And worse, the employer cannot easily take these down. Now, that might be nothing new, but the feature and lax verification on career websites pave the ways for attackers to post bogus listings for malicious purposes.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

The Conversation: We trained AI to recognise footprints, but it won’t replace forensic experts yet. “In forensic science, the expert witness plays a vital role. Lawyers seek them out for their analysis and opinion on specialist evidence. But experts are human, with all their failings, and the role of expert witnesses has frequently been linked to miscarriages of justice. We’ve been investigating the potential for AI to study evidence in forensic science. In two recent papers, we found AI was better at assessing footprints than general forensic scientists, but not better than specific footprint experts.”

The Next Web: Analysis: Tesla’s humanoid robot might be Elon’s dumbest idea yet. “Everybody wants this to be real. Me, you, the entire writing staff of the Simpsons (wait for it, I’m sure it’s coming), even Tesla’s competitors. We all want Rosie the Robot to be real. But here’s the truth laid bare: this is a hustle. The Tesla Robot is Elon Musk at his PT Barnum-esque best. He’s promising everything you want and daring you to dream along side him while he picks your pocket.” Good morning, Internet…

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August 22, 2021 at 05:33PM
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Saturday, August 21, 2021

Luis Gutiérrez, Ohio Redistricting, Twitter, More: Saturday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 21, 2021

Luis Gutiérrez, Ohio Redistricting, Twitter, More: Saturday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 21, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Northeastern Illinois University: Gutiérrez Congressional digital archive at NEIU Libraries is now available for viewing. “When U.S. Rep. Luis Gutiérrez chose not to seek reelection in 2018, he donated his Congressional archives to Northeastern Illinois University. The Luis V. Gutiérrez Congressional Archives, which contain 41 linear feet of documents, awards, letters and other paraphernalia, is now available for online viewing.”

Ohio Senate: Ohio Redistricting Commission Launches Redistricting.Ohio.Gov. “In addition to providing details about dates and locations for the Commission’s upcoming regional public hearings, the website provides access to witness slips for Ohioans who are interested in testifying in-person or submitting written testimony to the Commission. The website also provides access to 2020 U.S. Census data, which members of the public can use to create map proposals of their own. Maps can be uploaded to the website as ZIP files.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

The Verge: Twitter is testing a newsletter subscription button on profile pages. “Twitter is testing a feature that makes it even more enticing to use its recently acquired Revue newsletter platform: the ability to subscribe to a newsletter directly from a Twitter profile, without having to follow a link to a separate website. The feature can be enabled by all Revue newsletter writers, but the button is initially only being shown to a test group of Twitter users on Android and the web.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

BBC: The little-known human stories behind emoji designs. “Peter Tosh’s story doesn’t end happily; he was murdered in a horrific attack in the 1980s, but he left both a musical and a political legacy. And if you open your emoji keyboard and search for ‘levitating’, you will find a tiny picture of a man dressed in a dapper black suit, hat and shades. That is Peter Tosh.”

Mashable: Weird Spotify Playlists is an unexpected meme that pushes the boundaries. “There are now memes on Spotify. Yes, Spotify. Starting in the first week of August my Twitter feed became inundated by the account Weird Spotify Playlists, which posts screenshots of playlists where weird doesn’t even begin to cover it.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Politico: BlackBerry resisted announcing major flaw in software powering cars, hospital equipment. “A flaw in software made by BlackBerry has left two hundred million cars, along with critical hospital and factory equipment, vulnerable to hackers — and the company opted to keep it secret for months.”

Wired: Google Docs Scams Still Pose a Threat . “IN MAY 2017, a phishing attack now known as “the Google Docs worm” spread across the internet. It used special web applications to impersonate Google Docs and request deep access to the emails and contact lists in Gmail accounts…. The incident ultimately affected more than a million accounts before Google successfully contained it. New research indicates, though, that the company’s fixes don’t go far enough.”

Business Insider: T-Mobile customers file class action lawsuits as investigation finds 53 million affected by data breach. “The number of users whose personal information might have been compromised in a recent cyber attack of T-Mobile has climbed to 53 million, as the telecommunication company is hit by a pair of class-action lawsuits. T-Mobile announced Friday it had discovered that another 5.3 million current customers and 667,000 former customers also had their information stolen.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

National Institute of Standards and Technology: Common Solar Tech Can Power Smart Devices Indoors, NIST Study Finds . “We usually think of solar, or photovoltaic (PV), cells fixed to roofs, converting sunlight into electricity, but bringing that technology indoors could further boost the energy efficiency of buildings and energize swaths of wireless smart technologies such as smoke alarms, cameras and temperature sensors, also called Internet of Things (IoT) devices. Now, a study from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) suggests that a straightforward approach for capturing light indoors may be within reach.”

OTHER STUFF I THINK IS COOL

HackADay: Spiffy Summer Project Sources Solar Sounds From Scraps. “[Gijs Gieskes] has a long history of producing electronic art and sound contraptions, and his Zonneliedjes (sunsongs) project is certainly an entertaining perpetuation of his sonic creations. With the stated goal of making music from sunlight, the sunsongs most prominent feature is solar panels.” 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 22, 2021 at 05:14AM
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Maine Hurricane Evacuation, Google Health, The Social Dilemma, More: Saturday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 21, 2021

Maine Hurricane Evacuation, Google Health, The Social Dilemma, More: Saturday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 21, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

WMTW: Maine launches new hurricane evacuation dashboard. “The state of Maine has launched a new tool in the event a serious hurricane were to ever hit Maine. It is an online evacuation dashboard. Anyone can use the dashboard to get up-to-date information about the track of storms and directions if there is a need to evacuate.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Becker’s Health IT: Google dismantling health division as chief departs for Cerner. “Google is dissolving its health division as its chief, David Feinberg, MD, departs for Cerner, according to an Aug. 20 Insider report.”

Mashable: Netflix just put hit documentary ‘The Social Dilemma’ on YouTube for free. “If you love a good Netflix documentary exposing the truth about the dangers of AI and social media, you might have already seen The Social Dilemma. If you haven’t, you can now watch it for free.”

USEFUL STUFF

KnowTechie: This Google Chrome extension can walk back Twitter’s design changes. “Earlier this month, Twitter released a new design update that changed a few things. As usual, people had mixed feelings about the change, and many despised it entirely. If you were one of those that hate the changes, there is a Google Chrome extension that will revert the changes back to normal.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

The Verge: Roblox is struggling to moderate re-creations of mass shootings. “For over a year, Anti-Defamation League researcher Daniel Kelley has been finding re-creations of a horrific mass shooting on Roblox — and every time he looks, he says he finds more. Kelley told The Verge it’s happened three times: first in January 2020, then again in May 2021. The most recent incident came on August 13th, as he was preparing a presentation on how to report offending content.”

Federal News Network: NIH team creating new data tool that tracks federal employee perceptions and demographics. “Several agencies have said they’re craving more data that will paint a better intersectional picture of the federal workforce — how women of color or Hispanic supervisors and leaders, for example, are feeling about their agencies and jobs. Current federal survey data doesn’t tell those stories, and some agencies can only collect certain demographic data about their employees on a voluntary basis, a point that Office of Personnel Management and Office of Management and Budget leaders have acknowledged is a challenge.”

Ars Technica: iPhone keyboard for blind to shut down as maker cites Apple “abuse” of developers . “An iPhone keyboard for blind users will be discontinued, according to the app’s developer, who alleges that ‘Apple has thrown us obstacle after obstacle for years while we try to provide an app to improve people’s lives.'”

SECURITY & LEGAL

CNET: Taliban reportedly seize biometrics devices used by US military. “The Taliban have reportedly seized biometrics devices used by the US military that could help identify Afghan nationals who worked for the US government and aided coalition forces, raising concerns the Taliban could use the information to retaliate in the wake of the collapse of the US-backed government.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Wired: Now That Machines Can Learn, Can They Unlearn?. “A nascent area of computer science dubbed machine unlearning seeks ways to induce selective amnesia in artificial intelligence software. The goal is to remove all trace of a particular person or data point from a machine learning system, without affecting its performance. If made practical, the concept could give people more control over their data and the value derived from it.”

Pew (PEW PEW PEW PEW PEW!): More Americans now say government should take steps to restrict false information online than in 2018. “Amid rising concerns over misinformation online – including surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic, especially vaccines – Americans are now a bit more open to the idea of the U.S. government taking steps to restrict false information online. And a majority of the public continues to favor technology companies taking such action, according to a new Pew Research Center survey.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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August 21, 2021 at 11:59PM
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