Tuesday, November 23, 2021

Monday CoronaBuzz, November 22, 2021: 40 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Monday CoronaBuzz, November 22, 2021: 40 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.
By ResearchBuzz

Please get a booster shot. Please wear a mask when you’re inside with a bunch of people. Much love.

NEW RESOURCES – STATE-SPECIFIC

News on 6: State Health Dept. Launches New Tool To Better Share COVID-19 Data. “The Oklahoma State Health Department has launched a new tool to better show COVID-19 data. It’s a map that shows vaccine rates, case rates, and more, broken up by zip code.”

NEW RESOURCES – OTHER

NiemanLab: How journalism in middle America helped get communities through the pandemic. “News of the pandemic’s devastating effect on journalism was conveyed by headlines across the nation telling of newsroom closures, layoffs and furloughs. But how did so many local news organizations — especially newspapers — manage to survive the pandemic? Weeklies beefed up their daily online news coverage, business models were blown up, and existing rationales for why journalism matters became more than theoretical to rural journalists.”

UPDATES

ABC News: Push to vaccinate children accelerates as pediatric COVID-19 cases rise. “The rush to vaccinate children against COVID-19 is accelerating amid a steady increase in coronavirus infections and hospitalizations nationwide. Last week, nearly 142,000 child coronavirus cases were recorded, with weekly infections among children up by more than 40% since late October, according to a new report from the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and the Children’s Hospital Association (CHA).”

CORONAVIRUS MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

Washington Post: Fauci swamped by angry calls over beagle experiments after campaign that included misleading image. “Anthony S. Fauci was swamped by so many angry messages and threats that in late October his assistant quit answering the phone for two weeks. The U.S. covid chief got 3,600 phone calls in 36 hours, just as he and other Biden administration officials were preparing for the campaign to vaccinate young children. Much of the onslaught stemmed from a viral and false claim that the agency Fauci leads, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, had funded a medical experiment in which beagles were trapped in mesh cages filled with diseased sand flies, according to four National Institutes of Health officials familiar with the calls.”

AFP: Misleading report claims Covid-19 vaccines in Australia more deadly than disease itself. “An article circulating on Facebook claims Covid-19 vaccines have killed more people in Australia in 2021 than the disease itself, citing figures from the national drug regulator. The claim is misleading; the regulator’s database shows adverse reactions reported following vaccination but does not mean they were caused by the jab. There have been significantly fewer confirmed deaths from Covid-19 vaccination than from Covid-19 in Australia in 2021.”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

CNET: Used car prices up 37% year-over-year as supply constraints bite. “This year’s been a norm-busting time for a number of reasons, and used car prices are included. JD Power published a market update on Monday and delivered more bad news for used car prices: they’re still rocketing upward. After a brief reprieve this summer, the latest data from October 2021 showed prices rose 37% year-over-year compared to 2020. In other words, used cars cost almost 40% more than they did this time last year.”

MarketWatch: `The inflation genie is out of the bottle’ as consumer sentiment takes a hit and Californians pay $12 for a regular burrito. “The highest annual U.S. inflation rate in almost 31 years reverberated across financial markets and in the minds of Americans this week, damaging consumer sentiment, leaving many traders flummoxed, and causing one financial firm to warn that the proverbial ‘genie is out of the bottle.'”

BBC: How child sex abuse rose during pandemic in India. “Although the publication, transmission and possession of CSAM is banned under Indian law, it is still widespread. And the problem has been exacerbated by the coronavirus pandemic. According to activists and police officials, there has been a surge in the online demand and dissemination of child abuse imagery in the country since last year, as lockdowns imposed to contain Covid-19 confined people to their homes.”

Route Fifty: As Food Banks Struggle to Feed More Families at Thanksgiving, Localities Step Up to Help. “Food shortages and soaring prices have hampered many charities’ ability to collect and buy enough items. Municipal governments are investing new federal funds to boost these efforts.”

The Conversation: The ‘great resignation’ is a trend that began before the pandemic – and bosses need to get used to it. “As a professor of human resource management, I examine how employment and the work environment have changed over time and the impact this has on organizations and communities. While the current resignation behavior may seem like a new trend, data shows employee turnover has been rising steadily for the past decade and may simply be the new normal employers are going to have to get used to.”

ACTIVISM / PROTESTS

BBC: Rotterdam police clash with rioters as Covid protest turns violent. “Dutch police have shot and wounded at least two people after rioting erupted in Rotterdam over new Covid-19 measures. Protesters threw rocks and fireworks at them and set police cars ablaze. Hundreds of protesters had gathered to show their anger at government plans for a Covid vaccine pass, and a ban on fireworks on New Year’s Eve.”

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

Irish Times: ICU doctors speak out: ‘There’s no optimistic scenario. There’s only pessimism and carnage’. “I WAS LAST here at the Mater as a reporter in early June 2020, as we were nearing the end of the first wave and what we hoped might prove to be the end of the pandemic. Staff were tired and slightly shell-shocked, but there was a sense that a normality of sorts was beginning to return. The atmosphere today is markedly different. As before, I wear PPE and strictly adhere to the hospital’s infection-prevention controls, including social-distancing and hand-sanitising protocols. But this time no interviews take place on the wards – all are in meeting rooms on the floor where the hospital management have their offices, far away from patients. No nurses are available to talk – they are too busy – and no photography is allowed inside the hospital.”

HEALTH CARE – CAPACITY

WCCO: COVID In Minnesota: Nat’l Guard Arrives As Hospitals Are Overrun With COVID Cases. “Federal emergency relief teams from the U.S. Department of Defense are on their way to Minnesota to help doctors and nurses at two Minnesota hospitals. When the rest of the state is celebrating the Thanksgiving holiday, they’ll be fighting the state’s COVID-19 surge. The shortage of ICU beds is so severe, doctors warn emergency care across the state is being compromised.”

UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

CNET: CDC endorses Pfizer and Moderna COVID-19 booster shots for all adults. “An independent panel that advises the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention voted unanimously Friday to recommend COVID-19 boosters for everyone age 18 and up who received Pfizer’s or Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccines, at least six months after their second dose. CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky endorsed the committee’s expanded booster recommendations shortly after on Friday, making the guidance official.”

Politico: White House: About 95 percent of federal workers have complied with vaccine mandate. “Around 95 percent of the 3.5 million federal employees covered by President Joe Biden’s vaccine mandate for government workers have complied with the requirement ahead of its Monday deadline, according to the White House.”

WORLD/COUNTRY GOVERNMENT

BBC: Japan: From vaccine hesitancy to vaccine success. “With just seven weeks to go until the Olympics, only 3.5% of Japan’s population had been fully vaccinated. While friends in the UK were merrily posting vaccine selfies on social media, here in the capital Tokyo, we were joking we might not see a needle till Christmas. With the Olympics about to open, it seemed astonishing the Japanese government had bungled the vaccine rollout so badly. Six months later, it couldn’t be more different.”

BBC: Covid: WHO says it is very worried about Europe surge. “The World Health Organization (WHO) is ‘very worried’ about the spread of Covid-19 within Europe as the continent battles a fresh wave of infections. Speaking to the BBC, regional director Dr Hans Kluge warned that some 500,000 more deaths could be recorded by March unless urgent action is taken.”

BBC: Germany Covid: Health minister’s stark warning to get jabbed. “Germany’s health minister has issued his starkest warning yet on the importance of getting vaccinated. ‘By the end of this winter everyone in Germany will either be vaccinated, recovered or dead,’ Jens Spahn told a news conference in Berlin on Monday. Germany is in the grip of a fourth wave of coronavirus. Cases are rising rapidly and many hospitals are full.”

BBC: Covid in Kenya: Government gives 20 million a month to get vaccinated. “Kenyans will be barred from bars, restaurants and public transport from 21 December if they are not fully vaccinated against Covid-19, Health Minister Mutahi Kagwe says. The measures are aimed at increasing the rate of vaccinations ahead of the festive season.”

STATE GOVERNMENT

St. Louis Post-Dispatch: Missouri reports thousands of previously unreleased COVID-19 deaths, infections. “On Thursday, the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services once again reconfigured the state’s COVID-19 data dashboard, adding thousands of previously unreported deaths and infections. Some date back to the spring of 2020, and many are instances of illness or death now attributed to COVID-19 but that weren’t publicly tallied by the state at the time.”

WJHL: Tennessee counties deciding how to spend millions in ‘COVID money’. “Millions of dollars are coming to localities across Northeast Tennessee, and the time is coming for local governments to decide how to spend it. The American Rescue Plan will give over $360 billion to state and local governments across the nation to spend on a variety of needs. News Channel 11 asked the mayors of the two largest counties in the area by population, Sullivan and Washington, about their planning process on how to spend those funds.”

State of Michigan: MDHHS will issue face mask advisory for the holiday season due to rise in cases of flu and COVID-19. “With the increasing rise in COVID-19 and flu cases, the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) will be issuing a face mask advisory and offering guidance to keep loved ones safe and prevent the spread of respiratory illnesses during the holidays. MDHHS will issue a Public Health Advisory that recommends everyone over the age of 2 should wear a face mask at indoor gatherings regardless of their vaccination status. In addition, establishments should implement a policy to ensure that all persons entering or seeking services, including employees, wear a mask. This face mask advisory will remain effect until further notice.”

New York Times: Doctor Who Swabbed Cuomo Describes a Health Department in Shambles. “The N.Y. Health Department became a ‘toxic work environment’ early in the pandemic, a high-ranking doctor told officials investigating ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo.”

Route Fifty: More Than Two Dozen States in Limbo on Vaccine Mandate for Government Workers. “Officials in 26 states are awaiting word from the federal courts about whether they will have to meet a mandate to have government workers vaccinated against Covid-19 or tested weekly by a Jan. 4 deadline set by the Biden administration. If that happens, a lot of questions remain about how public sector organizations will meet the requirement.”

CNN: Judge declines Florida request to immediately block Biden HHS vaccine rule for health care workers. “A federal judge said this weekend that she would not block the Biden administration’s vaccine mandate for health care workers while a Florida lawsuit challenging the mandate moves forward.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

WMTV: ‘A medical miracle’: Maine woman with COVID-19 wakes up a day before doctors planned to take her off life support. “A Maine woman on a ventilator for 60 days after contracting COVID-19 was just a day from having life support turned off when she suddenly woke up. Andrew Lerman said his mother, Bettina Lerman, 69, tested positive for the virus in September.”

KWWL: Des Moines UAW negotiator dies of COVID-19 after contract ratified. “The chief negotiator for the UAW in central Iowa died from COVID-19, after the new contract was ratified. According to the UAW 450 Facebook page, Curtis Templeman was sick while working through negotiations, then went to the doctor when they were over and found out he had COVID-19.”

BBC Sport: Australian Open 2022: Unvaccinated players unable to compete at Grand Slam. “Unvaccinated players will not be allowed to compete at the 2022 Australian Open, says tournament director Craig Tiley. There had been confusion over the issue in recent months with contradictory statements from leading Australian politicians.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

Chattanooga Times Free Press: UTC drops mask mandate despite exemption from new Tennessee law reining in COVID-19 restrictions. “The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga will stand by its move to not require face masks on campus, despite the state granting the university system the ability to do so. The university system was granted an exemption from provisions in a new state law barring government entities from issuing mask and vaccine mandates to protect against the spread of COVID-19, which has killed 16,740 Tennesseans.”

Inside Higher Education: Berklee College of Music Goes Online Due to COVID-19. “The Berklee College of Music, in Boston, did not have classes Thursday and will have online classes only through Tuesday, Nov. 23. A notice on the college’s website said, ‘Classes will be cancelled for Thursday, November 18, and we will be working with faculty to move to remote instruction beginning Friday, November 19. This mode of instruction will be in effect through Tuesday, November 23. Essential campus operations will remain open under current masking protocols, including residence halls and dining facilities. Administrative offices will remain in operation, and student appointments with staff and faculty can occur remotely during this time.'”

Lansing State Journal: MSU staff want back pay for COVID-19 wage cuts. “Michigan State University faculty and staff lost thousands of dollars each in wages due to COVID-related budget cuts, and now they want to be paid back. Non-union faculty and academic staff at MSU saw their salaries cut by 1% to 7% between September 2020 and July 2021. For deans and executive managers, those cuts were between 2% and 10%. The cuts were made as a cost-savings measure as MSU dealt with the financial impacts of COVID-19. Those salaries have since been returned to pre-pandemic levels, but faculty and staff are now calling for back pay.”

HEALTH

Medical Xpress: Researchers confirm link between testing positive for COVID-19 and fatigue and sleep problems. “Those who tested positive for COVID-19 (confirmed by a PCR test) had an increased risk of mental illness, fatigue and sleep problems, finds a new study that analyzed the electronic primary care health care records of 226,521 people from across the UK between February 2020 and December 2020.”

The Guardian: ‘Zero-Covid is not going to happen’: experts predict a steep rise in US cases this winter. “A steep rise in Covid-19 cases in Europe should serve as a warning that the US could also see significant increases in coronavirus cases this winter, particularly in the nation’s colder regions, scientists say. However, there is more cause for optimism as America enters its second pandemic winter, even in the face of likely rises in cases.”

Associated Press: How COVID shots for kids help prevent dangerous new variants. “Each infection — whether in an adult in Yemen or a kid in Kentucky — gives the virus another opportunity to mutate. Protecting a new, large chunk of the population anywhere in the world limits those opportunities. That effort got a lift with 28 million U.S. kids 5 to 11 years old now eligible for child-sized doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine.”

Washington Post: Treatments will change the pandemic, but they can’t end it alone. “The notion that a fearsome infection could soon be treatable with a handful of pills is an exhilarating idea nearly two years into a pandemic that has killed more than 5 million people, at least 770,000 in the United States. But experts — who are thrilled about the prospect of two powerful new medicines — worry that enthusiasm for the idea of treatments may distract from their limitations and the necessity of preventing illness in the first place.”

NPR: Why people with mental illness are at higher risk of COVID. “Last year, researchers analyzed data from five hospitals in the Yale New Haven Health System to see how people with a mental health diagnosis who were hospitalized with COVID-19 fared compared to others. ‘What we found was we had a higher level of mortality for those that had a prior psychiatric history,’ says psychiatrist Dr. Luming Li, who was working on her Master’s degree at Yale University at the time.”

Route Fifty: How the Pandemic Helped Spread Fentanyl Across the US and Drive Opioid Overdose Deaths to a Grim New High. “It is especially tragic that these deaths are mainly occurring in people with a disease – opioid addiction – that is both preventable and treatable. Most heroin users want to avoid fentanyl. But increasingly, the heroin they seek is mixed with fentanyl or what they purchase is just fentanyl without any heroin in the mix. While the spread of fentanyl is the primary cause of the spike in overdose deaths, the coronavirus pandemic also made the crisis worse.”

Smithsonian Magazine: Up to 1.6 Million People in the U.S. Have Long-Term Smell Loss Due to Covid-19. “A loss of smell—called anosmia—can be one of the first symptoms of a Covid-19 infection; one study reports that between 30 and 80 percent of diagnosed folks experience some variation of anosmia. Taking a big whiff of perfume, food or wine and not smelling anything at all can be an odd, confusing sensation, but around 90 percent of people recover their sense of smell as soon as two weeks, reports Ed Cara for Gizmodo. However, some people are taking much longer to recover their smell. For others, it may never come back.”

RESEARCH

Stat News: Pfizer’s Covid-19 vaccine was 100% effective in kids in longer-term study. “Pfizer and BioNTech announced Monday that their Covid-19 vaccine was 100% efficacious in preventing infections in 12- to 15-year-olds, measured from seven days to four months after administration of the second dose of the vaccine.”

OPINION

The Guardian: ICU is full of the unvaccinated – my patience with them is wearing thin. “Enshrined in the way we protect patients’ autonomy is the recognition that others may reasonably make decisions we may see as irrational or wrong. We are all products of our upbringing, education and opportunities, and I have been hugely fortunate that in my case these have led me to make decisions I value. Who is to say I wouldn’t have made different choices in someone else’s shoes. Translating this to the choice not to take the vaccine, however, I find my patience wearing thin. I think this is for a number of reasons. Even if you are not worried about your own risk from Covid, you cannot know the risk of the people into whose faces you may cough; there is a dangerous and selfish element to this that I find hard to stomach.”

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



November 23, 2021 at 07:26PM
via ResearchBuzz https://ift.tt/3DOAg1a

Cerebral Palsy Research, Predatory Publishing, Muscle Cell Biology, More: Tuesday ResearchBuzz, November 23, 2021

Cerebral Palsy Research, Predatory Publishing, Muscle Cell Biology, More: Tuesday ResearchBuzz, November 23, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Cerebral Palsy Alliance: World’s largest genomics database for cerebral palsy launched. “An international group of researchers has come together to launch CP Commons, a world-first collaborative database to progress understanding of the genome’s role in causing cerebral palsy. The CP Commons is a unique international resource where researchers from around the world will be able to deposit, exchange and access clinical and genomic data.”

McMaster University: Library releases guide on avoiding predatory publishers and conferences. “Deceptive publishers, commonly referred to as ‘predatory journals’, are for-profit entities that purport to publish high-quality academic research, but do not follow accepted scholarly practices. The McMaster online resource, available on the library website, will help the research community spot a predatory publisher or conference. Among the features of the guide are an overview of deceptive publishers, a checklist on how to avoid predatory publishers, a conference checker tool and links to additional resources.”

Cornell Chronicle: New cell database paints fuller picture of muscle repair. “When a muscle becomes injured, it repairs itself using a flurry of cellular activity, with stem cells splitting and differentiating into many types of specialized cells, each playing an important role in the healing process. Biologists have struggled to study rare and transient muscle cells involved in the process, but Cornell engineers have lifted the curtain on these elusive dynamics with the launch of scMuscle, one of the largest single-cell databases of its kind.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Library of Congress: Reflecting On a Year of Selected Datasets. “The Selected Datasets Collection was publicly launched June 2020 as part of the Library’s ongoing efforts to support emerging data-driven styles of research. Since then, our initial offering of twenty datasets has grown to nearly 200 unique items, and we’ve continued to refine the technical workflows by which content is prepared and delivered to users via loc.gov. We are pleased to share how these workflows have allowed the Library to provide access to certain LC-published datasets, in addition to highlighting some of the new items added to the Selected Datasets Collection.”

The Bergen Record: More historic burial grounds for African Americans discovered in New Jersey. “How many African American burial sites are there in New Jersey? As it turns out, there are more than the 50-plus sites that were identified in an unofficial database published by NorthJersey.com and the USA Today Network in August. Readers responded to a request for other African American burial sites that were not included in the initial article and provided additional locations not previously known. Some still exist but are no longer active while others have been repurposed.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Coda Story: Kashmir’s vanishing newspaper archives. “In a long-troubled region of India, articles critical of the national government are being erased from the websites of local news outlets. Journalists believe that pressure from New Delhi is to blame.” Sounds like something Turkey would do.

SECURITY & LEGAL

Daily Maverick: The ‘Pandora Papers’: Effective use of open-source data can be a treasure trove to curb potential for corruption in South Africa. “The Pandora Papers and its 2016 predecessor, the Panama Papers, were based on leaked data. But the development of investigative databases to hold public bodies such as municipal authorities or police departments to account, and open-source investigation tools (OSINT), make it easier for investigators to follow the electronic clues.”

Motherboard: Someone Made a Pirate Bay for NFTs. “It’s the duty of those with right-clicker mentality to save every NFT they see. But right-click saving the thousands of JPEGs of Bored Apes and Lazy Lions out there tiring work. That’s why Australian artists and programmer Geoffrey Huntley created The NFT Bay—a new torrent site where anyone can download 15 terabytes of JPEGs from a single source.”

CNET: FBI and CISA issue holiday ransomware, cyberattack warning. “The FBI and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency issued a warning on Monday to remind organizations to stay alert and take precautions against ransomware and cyberattacks this holiday season.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Psychology Today: Why Body-Positive Social Media May Be Good for You. “In a new experiment, researchers at the University of the Sunshine Coast (Australia) investigated whether body-positive social media could cause improvements in people’s body image, and, if so, what factors might explain who benefits most.”

New York University: Warnings May Reduce Hate Speech on Twitter. “Warning Twitter users about potential adverse consequences of their use of hate speech can decrease their subsequent posting of hateful language for a week, a new study by NYU’s Center for Social Media and Politics shows.” Good morning, Internet…

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



November 23, 2021 at 06:37PM
via ResearchBuzz https://ift.tt/3l3uKQX

Monday, November 22, 2021

Zanesville Museum of Art, Malta National Archives, Dragonera Nature Park, More: Monday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, November 22, 2021

Zanesville Museum of Art, Malta National Archives, Dragonera Nature Park, More: Monday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, November 22, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Times Recorder: Local News Briefs: Museum of Art launches online database. “The Zanesville Museum of Art recently launched an online database of its permanent collection, featuring more than 8,000 pieces…. The database includes more than 3,000 works with items from the American art pottery, studio pottery, paintings and other sections.”

Times of Malta: Website brings Malta’s recent history to people’s computers. “The National Archives have activated Memorja, a website featuring videos, voice recordings and pictures of Malta through the ages in what should be a field day for history buffs. The inauguration was made by Culture Minister Jose’ Herrera, who said this project is a showcase of Malta and the Maltese.” The comments on this article complain about a broken site that’s hard to navigate. I took a quick look. It’s fine. It is weird to have the little shopping cart icon on the home page.

Majorca Daily Bulletin: New website all about the island of Dragonera. “The Council of Mallorca has launched a website with information about the Dragonera Nature Park… The home page has three blocks of content – Visit the park, Itineraries and Environmental Education – and this content enables users to know everything that the park offers ‘in a simple and intuitive way’.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Ars Technica: Google Messages update translates iMessage responses for Android users. “Of course, in an ideal world, the non-stopgap solution to this communication problem would be for Apple to add RCS messaging support to iPhones, or for it to make iMessage an open standard, or for Apple and Google and the world’s phone carriers to get on the same page about a single standard that they can all support.”

CNET: Twitter partners with S&P 500 on stock index that crowdsources public opinion. “The S&P 500 Twitter Sentiment Index launched on Thursday to measure public opinion of companies in the S&P 500 stock market index. Through the Twitter API, S&P analyzes both bearish and bullish tweets in real time to score the level of positive sentiment surrounding each company.”

USEFUL STUFF

Coin Week: Online Resources for Researching Ancient Coins. “With thousands of types issued by hundreds of cities, states, and rulers over many centuries, information on ancient coins is scattered across out-of-print books and obscure journal articles in many languages. A common saying among old-school collectors is ‘buy the book before you buy the coin’ – but finding these books often requires diligent, patient search, and buying them may demand deep pockets. Fortunately, during the past two decades, a tremendous range of instantly accessible online resources has emerged to help the collector of ancient coins in their study and research.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

ZDNet: Over a million WordPress sites breached. “WordPress is far more than just blogs. It powers over 42% of all websites. So whenever there’s a WordPress security failure, it’s a big deal. And now GoDaddy, which is the top global web hosting firm with tens of millions more sites than its competition, reports that data on 1.2 million of its WordPress customers has been exposed.” This looks really bad.

Korea Joongang Daily: Google’s response to Korea ‘laughable’: CAF leader. “Korea’s ongoing battle with the world’s largest tech companies is shaping up to be epic. Months in, the country’s aggressive gambit, in the form of the ‘Anti-Google law,’ has been met with a seeming flimflam from Google and a stiff-arm from Apple. It might be a disappointing result if it were not for the fact that the world has taken note, and Korea is fast becoming a base camp for a global resistance to what is referred to by some as a duopoly.”

KnowTechie: For the love of all that is holy, stop using these terrible passwords. “The website NordPass has released its list of the 200 most common passwords that are used around the world. The overwhelming majority of the top results used can be cracked in just a matter of a few seconds, according to the website.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Washington Post: One-third of children ages 7 to 9 use social media apps, study says. “It’s not just teens but much younger kids who are also using social media. About a third of children ages 7 to 9 use social media apps on phones or tablets, according to a report from children’s health researchers at the University of Michigan.” 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!



November 23, 2021 at 03:38AM
via ResearchBuzz https://ift.tt/3DKmX1Z

Manolo Blahnik, American Friends Service Committee, Cerro Gordo Ghost Town, More: Monday ResearchBuzz, November 22, 2021

Manolo Blahnik, American Friends Service Committee, Cerro Gordo Ghost Town, More: Monday ResearchBuzz, November 22, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

WWD: Manolo Blahnik Unveils a Digital Archive With Color, and British Humor. “The Manolo Blahnik Archives: ‘New Way of Walking’ is part museum, part VIP gallery tour, part pop culture lecture that brings the designer’s work, inspirations and memories to life in a 3D experience that stretches across five separate ‘rooms.'”

Financial Planning: A Quaker immigration divestment list and the growing scope of ESG data. ESG stands for “Environmental, Social, and Governance,” I believe. “As more clients seek politically infused portfolios and products of all bents, a Quaker organization launched a new database tracking the immigration impact of publicly-traded firms. The American Friends Service Committee revealed the findings earlier this month of its research on which companies the organization accuses of ‘profiting from border militarization and the surveillance and criminalization of immigrants.'”

One of the YouTube channels I subscribe to is called Corridor Crew. The channel’s description is “We run a production studio based upon ingenuity, hard work, and friendship. Watch our ups and downs as professional creators!” Its most recent video was about using LiDAR to scan an entire ghost town. WITH A PHONE. Cerro Gordo is now available to view (and in some cases walk through!) at https://poly.cam/cerro-gordo . I watched most of the backstory video with my jaw on the floor. The progress made by LiDAR scanning apps is unbelievable. If you didn’t realize how far phone-based 3D scanning has come, do yourself a favor and watch the video or visit the ghost town online. Y’all, they scanned an entire town in SOMETHING LIKE TWO DAYS.

Baltimore Fishbowl: “Worthy of monumentalization”: Black Arts District preserves cultural memory of Pennsylvania Avenue. “Immortalized in bronze, Billie Holiday sings in the Upton neighborhood, her hair adorned with gardenias. Across the striking statue once stood the Royal Theatre, the famed West Baltimore venue where Holiday and fellow Black jazz and blues stars once performed. The eight-and-a-half-foot statue is the sole monument of how Pennsylvania Avenue was an epicenter for Black art and entertainment businesses during the early to mid-20th century.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

VentureBeat: OpenAI makes GPT-3 generally available through its API. “OpenAI today removed the waitlist for GPT-3, its large language model that can automatically write emails and articles, compose poetry, create code across a dozen programming languages, and more. Starting today, any developer in a supported country can sign up to begin integrating the model with their app or service.”

USEFUL STUFF

Lifehacker: How to Lock Your Secrets in the Notes App (and Why You Should). “Searching for data or photo lockers will lead you to many apps. Some of them are genuinely secure—others, less so—but given that you’re dealing with secure data (documents, photos, security codes, or bank details), you maybe don’t want to trust a third-party iPhone app that happens to have a thousand 5-star reviews. Because it’s actually better to use Apple’s Notes app instead.”

Polygon: How to make your Twitch stream more accessible with subtitles. “Over the years, streaming platforms and tools have made it easier than ever to create streams accessible to everyone. In this explainer, I’ll go through captioning tools, subtitles to complement captioning, and screen reader accessibility instructions.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

City of Tallahassee, Florida: City’s John G. Riley Museum Awarded $246,250 Grant For Archival Digitization Project Partnership. “The City of Tallahassee’s John G. Riley Center and Museum of African American History and Culture was recently awarded a three-year Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) Museum Grant for African American History and Culture. The $246,250 grant will support cross-organizational efforts to digitize its vast archival collection in partnership with the Florida State University Libraries and the Riley Museum Archives at Tallahassee Community College.”

Trains: Cheseapeake & Ohio Historical society receives slides from J. David Ingles collection. “Chesapeake & Ohio Historical Society announced in a press release that it received a collection of slides from the estate of J. David Ingles, the late senior editor of Classic Trains magazine and former editor of Trains magazine. The collection includes many slides from the 1960s and 1970s of the C&O in Ohio and Michigan, Ingles’ birthplace and one-time residence. The historical society is working to scan the approximately 3,000 slides to add to its digital archive.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Associated Press: NYC aims to be first to rein in AI hiring tools. “Job candidates rarely know when hidden artificial intelligence tools are rejecting their resumes or analyzing their video interviews. But New York City residents could soon get more say over the computers making behind-the-scenes decisions about their careers.”

CNET: Google knows where you are 24/7. Turning off these settings can stop it. “If you use any Google app, your location and data history might be stored. We’ll walk you through how to turn off location services and delete your location history.”

WZFG: North Dakota to create new database for missing people; project first proposed in 2019 . “During the special session, the state legislature approved spending $300,000 in ARPA funding to pay for the new database. The system is expected to be online in 6 to 8 months. The database will enable all law enforcement, including tribal officers, to upload information into a shared system. Citizens will also be allowed to access the system so they can assist in searches.” Good morning, Internet…

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



November 22, 2021 at 08:53PM
via ResearchBuzz https://ift.tt/3FA0kO8

Sunday, November 21, 2021

Metallica, Spotify, Google Play, More: Sunday ResearchBuzz, November 21, 2021

Metallica, Spotify, Google Play, More: Sunday ResearchBuzz, November 21, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Music Ally: Metallica Black Box is the band’s online memorabilia museum. “Metal veterans Metallica are diving back into their history with the launch of the Metallica Black Box. It’s an online museum of memorabilia curated by the band, including all manner of photos from their personal collections.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

The Verge: Spotify launches lyrics feature globally for free and paying users. “Today, Spotify is finally rolling out its real-time lyrics feature globally, after previously only offering it in a limited selection of countries. The lyrics themselves are provided by Musixmatch, which claims to offer lyrics for ‘over 8 million’ titles. and will be accessible on basically every platform where Spotify has an app.”

Ars Technica: Google Play website gets its first redesign in years, looks like a big app. “While the Play Store app on Android devices is continually updated, the website has mostly been forgotten. The current Google Play website design dates back to 2013. The site has had some small tweaks since then, but the bones of the site are still eight years old, and it presents content in a card motif that Google has moved on from. The new website looks just like the Android app. That means lots of whitespace and a layout focused on app icons and video thumbnails.”

USEFUL STUFF

Mashable: 5 best free photo layout apps . “Photo layout apps, which can help you quickly and easily create attractive photo collages and montages, are an absolute godsend for those of us who aren’t conveniently blessed with mad Photoshop skills. After testing dozens of them, we can now bring you, in alphabetical order, the five best free photo layout apps out there.”

MakeUseOf: The Best Two-Way Walkie Talkie Apps for Android and iPhone . “Unless you’re a security guard or the foreman on a construction site, you probably haven’t used a walkie talkie since you were a kid. Yet the idea of instant voice chat with individuals or groups is still pretty compelling. There are heaps of free Android and iPhone walkie talkie apps that give you a fun chatting experience. Let’s take a look at them.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Irish News: Teachers demand action against abusive TikTok videos. “TEACHERS are demanding that social media companies take firm action to remove all videos which abuse school staff. The call came as the PSNI warned pupils that setting up false TikTok profiles for schools could ‘quickly escalate’ and lead to criminal offences.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Associated Press: Iran-backed hackers accused of targeting critical US sectors. “Hackers linked to the Iranian government have been targeting a ‘broad range of victims’ inside the United States, including by deploying ransomware, according to an advisory issued Wednesday by American, British and Australian officials.”

BuzzFeed News: Trolls Targeted BTS Fan Accounts With Phony Copyright Claims To Get Them Booted Off Twitter. “BTS fans were inundated with copyright infringement notices that got their accounts booted off Twitter — but the complaints didn’t come from the chart-topping K-pop group. Instead, a Facebook group of trolls, who are based in Bangladesh and called themselves ‘Team Copyright,’ weaponized these nuisance claims as a tactic for censorship and harassment.”

Bloomberg: Sonos Case Against Google Gets Closer Scrutiny by ITC. “A U.S. trade agency is taking a closer look at Sonos Inc.’s claims that Alphabet Inc.’s Google infringes patents for home audio systems and is considering whether to shut some Google smart home devices, phones and laptops out of the U.S. market.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Straits Times: Singapore: Government to invest additional $180 mil. to accelerate AI research . “Two new public artificial intelligence (AI) programs have been launched as part of the republic’s strategy to use the technology to effect social and economic good. These come as Singapore allocates an additional $180 million to accelerate AI research, on top of the $500 million it has committed to it so far.”

WebMD: Teen Social Media Posts About Cutting, Self-Harm Are Soaring. “American teens are increasingly turning to the social media giant Instagram to share graphic images of their own attempts to harm themselves, a new study reveals.” 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!



November 22, 2021 at 02:19AM
via ResearchBuzz https://ift.tt/3xaXoof

Saturday, November 20, 2021

Mary Rowe, Google Meet, DuckDuckGo, More: Saturday ResearchBuzz, November 20, 2021

Mary Rowe, Google Meet, DuckDuckGo, More: Saturday ResearchBuzz, November 20, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

MIT News: MIT Libraries digitizes materials from Mary Rowe. “Mary Rowe, former MIT ombudsperson, has donated professional papers to the MIT Libraries’ department of Distinctive Collections as part of the Women@MIT archival initiative, which highlights the contributions of women at the Institute by acquiring, preserving, and making accessible their personal archives. Rowe is a conflict management specialist whose work contributed to MIT having one of the world’s first anti-harassment policies and one of the first organizational ombuds offices. Important portions of her collection have now been digitized by the libraries, making the history of Rowe’s groundbreaking work more accessible.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

9to5 Google: Google Meet adds new ‘immersive backgrounds’ that mimic a real-life cafe or condo. “One way of making the endless torrent of personal and work video calls more palatable is by setting unique backgrounds. Google Meet on the web is introducing new ‘immersive backgrounds’ that attempt to give your surroundings some life.” Looks like this is restricted to Workplace customers at the moment.

Fast Company: DuckDuckGo’s Android anti-tracking protection does what Google won’t. “While Apple has been aggressive about building anti-tracking tools into iOS, Google is still working on a way to let Android users opt out of being tracked across apps. And unlike Apple, Google—whose whole business is based on keeping tabs on users to target advertising—won’t require app makers to get opt-in permission if they want to track you in the first place. So now, privacy-centric search company DuckDuckGo is stepping in with its own privacy protections for Android users.”

Associated Press: Google Reaches Content Deals With German Publishers. “Google said Friday it has signed agreements with several large German publishers to avoid copyright disputes over the use of their material. The Internet giant said it reached deals with publishers including news weeklies Der Spiegel and Die Zeit, technology portals Golem and Netzwelt, as well as the business publications WirtschaftsWoche and Manager Magazin.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

PRNewswire: The Henry Ford Acquires Multimedia Archive of Artist and Pioneer Lillian F. Schwartz (PRESS RELEASE). “The Henry Ford is proud to announce today the acquisition of the Lillian F. Schwartz Collection. Comprised of over 5,000 2D and 3D items, the collection contains Schwartz’s artwork, personal papers, photographs, books and more, spanning from her childhood into her late career. Best known for her pioneering work in computer generated art and computer-aided art analysis, Lillian Schwartz created groundbreaking film, video, animation, special effects, virtual reality, and multimedia works of art throughout her career…. The collection is currently at The Henry Ford and being digitized for online accessibility.”

Irish Tech News: TG4 Appoints Its First Archivist. “TG4 wants to increase public access to the station’s digital archive as they celebrate 25 years on air. As a custodian of Irish language Linguistic Assets broadcasting legacy, The TG4 archive contains a valuable and varied repository of material. The development of the digital archive will continue in 2022, work that has been ongoing since the end of 2011. When complete, TG4’s Irish Language Digital Archive will be one of the most extensive and significant bodies of Irish language audio-visual material in the world.”

Bleeping Computer: Winamp prepares a relaunch, new beta version almost ready. “Winamp is getting closer to release with a redesigned website, logo, and a new beta signup allowing users to soon test the upcoming version of the media player. Before we streamed our music, users would rip their albums or download MP3s to listen on their computer using media players. One of the most popular media players to play MP3s was Winamp, with its retro skins and animated visualizers that moved along with the music you were playing.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Reuters: S.Korea lawmaker says Apple, Google not doing enough to comply with app store law. “Apple Inc and Alphabet’s Google are not doing enough to comply with a South Korean law that bars dominant app store operators from forcing app developers to use their payment systems, a lawmaker who spearheaded the amendment told Reuters.”

BNN Bloomberg: Google Will Pay AFP for Its News in First Deal After French Fine. “Google has agreed to pay news wire Agence France-Presse for the use of its content, its first deal following a fine from the French regulator over its approach to negotiating compensation for news organizations. The Alphabet Inc. division and AFP struck the accord after months of negotiations, the companies said in a statement Wednesday. The amount wasn’t disclosed. The news agency reported that the deal would cover content in all European Union countries for five years.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

The Verge: Alphabet is putting its prototype robots to work cleaning up around Google’s offices. “What does Google’s parent company Alphabet want with robots? Well, it would like them to clean up around the office, for a start. The company announced today that its Everyday Robots Project — a team within its experimental X labs dedicated to creating ‘a general-purpose learning robot’ — has moved some of its prototype machines out of the lab and into Google’s Bay Area campuses to carry out some light custodial tasks.”

The Tribune: PG&E is using AI cameras to watch for wildfires across Central Coast — including SLO County. “PG&E has installed a dozen cameras equipped with artificial intelligence in San Luis Obispo County as part of a statewide effort to attempt to prevent the kind of devastating wildfires that ravage California each year.”

OTHER STUFF I THINK IS COOL

CNET: Comedy Wildlife Photography Award winners highlight animals’ lighter side. “If these photos are any proof, animals have their best and worst days too. Raccoons share secrets, fish are awed by their companion’s ability to jump, a pigeon is defeated by a fallen leaf and a prairie dog faces down a bald eagle. There’s a smile for every mood in this year’s Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards winners.” Good morning, Internet…

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



November 20, 2021 at 10:11PM
via ResearchBuzz https://ift.tt/3oFETo4

Friday, November 19, 2021

National Museum of African American History, Irish Catholic Clergy, Wikipedia, More: Friday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, November 19, 2021

National Museum of African American History, Irish Catholic Clergy, Wikipedia, More: Friday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, November 19, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Washington Post: Smithsonian African American museum launches online interactive access. “The Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture launched a sophisticated digital platform Thursday that brings a trove of interactive stories, images and video about the Black experience out of the museum and onto the Internet. Called the Searchable Museum, it is designed to present the treasures of the five-year-old landmark on the National Mall in Washington to a broader audience, said museum director Kevin Young. The museum, which opened to the public on Sept. 24, 2016, has 40,000 artifacts.”

Irish Genealogy News: New digital archive and database of Irish Catholic clergy launches. “A new digital archive and database of the Irish clerical population from medieval to modern times has been launched out of Maynooth University’s Arts and Humanities Institute…. The first phase of the Clericus project focussed on students and faculty of St Patrick’s College, Maynooth, historically Ireland’s largest seminary and pontifical university. The principal sources were 124 student class portraits and student lists dating from the second half of the 19th century to 2018.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Diff Wikimedia Blog: Content translation tool helps create one million Wikipedia articles. “The Content Translation tool, which was developed by the Wikimedia Foundation Language team in 2014 to simplify translating Wikipedia articles,recently reached a massive milestone of supporting the creation of one million articles.”

USEFUL STUFF

THE Journal: Free K–12 Resources to Help with Remote and Blended Learning in 2022. “While hundreds of education companies, nonprofits and other organizations made their software and services free during the immediate switch to remote learning, many have become more thoughtful about how they help educators master online and blended instruction. We’ve winnowed through our previous collection and sprinkled additions throughout, to bring you this updated set of free resources to help with online, hybrid and face-to-face in 2022.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Axios: Scoop: Microsoft, Uber leaving Internet Association. “Microsoft and Uber are leaving the Internet Association (IA), a trade group that lobbies on behalf of internet companies and the tech industry, Axios has confirmed. Why it matters: Losing Microsoft and Uber, two major members, is a blow for the group. The association has seen steadily waning influence in D.C. in recent years, partly because it does not work on the competition and antitrust issues that beset the industry right now.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

The Verge: Robinhood says hackers also got thousands of phone numbers. “Earlier this month, Robinhood reported that an employee falling victim to a social engineering attack led to hackers obtaining 5 million customers’ emails, and 2 million customers’ names. Additionally, around 300 customers had more details like zip codes and dates of birth stolen, while 10 customers had ‘more extensive account details revealed.’ Phone numbers weren’t mentioned in the company’s original post.”

Slightly outside my lane, including anyway from Good E-Reader: The US is investigating the terms ebook distributors charge libraries. “Two US representatives have written letters to aggregators that distribute and sell digital content to libraries. They want to know all about the standard ebook licensing agreements for every major publisher they work with, including Hachette, HarperCollins, Penguin Random House and Simon & Schuster.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Panorama: Toward a More Inclusive Digital Art History. “The use of digital technologies in the humanistic disciplines—including art history—has largely lagged behind the rest of academia. This slow uptake of digital and quantitative approaches has limited the range of methods available to art historians, cutting off many potentially productive avenues of research. ‘Toward a More Inclusive Digital Art History,’ a joint project funded through a generous grant by the Terra Foundation for American Art and administered by Panorama: The Journal of the Association of Historians of American Art, seeks to fill this theoretical and methodological lacuna.”

Slate: Google Needs to Defund Misinformation. “This content moderation problem is not unique to Facebook; it plagues all the large social media platforms. However, at least with misinformation, the recent focus on content moderation is distracting us from something important: In addition to detecting misinformation on social media, A.I. can be a tool for defunding misinformation so it doesn’t spread on social media in the first place. But it’s not being used for this second purpose nearly as effectively as it could be.”

Bethel University: Research Team Probes History with Cutting-Edge Tech . “Building off of ideas sparked in Bethel’s Advanced Digital Humanities course, Zach Haala ’23 and Associate Professor of History Charlie Goldberg are conducting a research project to use artificial intelligence to probe historical archives for patterns. They are one of the student-faculty research teams to receive a 2021-22 Edgren Scholarship.” 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!



November 20, 2021 at 01:52AM
via ResearchBuzz https://ift.tt/3DyYKM0