Friday, December 17, 2021

Congressional Finances, Perovskite Solar Cells, Twitter, more: Friday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 17, 2021

Congressional Finances, Perovskite Solar Cells, Twitter, more: Friday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 17, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Business Insider: Search the assets, investments, outside employment, and debts of congressional lawmakers using Insider’s exclusive databases. “Insider has compiled and analyzed hundreds of US House and Senate financial disclosures to create a searchable, sortable, and near-complete accounting of members of Congress’ personal finances. The databases — one for the Senate and one for the House — include members of Congress’ individual assets, stock transactions, debts, and other outside income. They are the most complete and detailed public accounting of the individual finances of federal lawmakers.”

Chemistry World: Painstakingly curated perovskite database of over 40,000 devices set to speed up solar research. “Ninety-four researchers have undertaken a colossal challenge: manually reviewing over 16,000 papers to extract information on perovskite solar cells. Now, they have launched an open-access database with all this information. This massive collection of data could accelerate the discovery of photoactive materials and contribute to a better understanding of how these solar cells work.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Ubergizmo: Twitter Will Now Automatically Caption Videos. “According to Twitter, this feature will be made available globally and will cover ‘most languages’, so depending on your language, your mileage may vary, but hopefully it is covered. However, keep in mind that according to The Verge, Twitter says that automatic captioning will only apply to new videos uploaded to its platform. This means that older videos will not be getting this feature, so that’s a bit of a bummer.”

Mashable: TikTok made a Discord, so…chaos?. “TikTok has launched a Discord server, where TikTok-enthusiasts can chat about all things…TikTok. Most widely used in the gaming world, Discord has been favoured by gamers since its launch in 2015, championing voice chat rooms, and text-based threads. Since then, Discord has evolved, bringing more like-minded communities together.”

9to5 Google: Play Store adds ‘Your devices’ search filter to make it easier to find compatible apps. “Expanding upon the ability to remotely install apps from your phone to Android TV and Wear OS watches, this new search filter will appear when you enter a term or query and want to drill down into more concise and targetted sections.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Indian Country Today: Canadian museum works to reconcile its past. “[Julie] White was recruited by the Canadian Museum for Human Rights to work as an Aboriginal guide in 2015, one year after the museum opened. She was 25 years old, and in the next few years she learned more about herself, her people and her country than ever before. She also learned about the lies behind the history and behind the museum itself — that the museum refused to acknowledge the genocide against Indigenous people in Canada even while decrying it elsewhere around the world, why human rights issues were sometimes hidden behind closed doors, why staffers like her experienced the same issues the museum claimed to be standing up against. And she learned how a grassroots effort to draw attention to injustice can sometimes overturn the wrongs in society.”

The Verge: The Army is in hot water over TikTok recruiting activity. “The US Army is facing pressure from Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) after recruiters were caught using TikTok to find leads on young Americans to enlist, despite orders banning the app’s use on government devices.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Reuters: Exclusive: California probes Google’s treatment of Black female workers. “California’s civil rights regulator is investigating Google’s treatment of Black female workers following alleged incidents of harassment and discrimination, according to two people familiar with the matter and emails from the agency seen by Reuters.”

University of Florida: Sharing photos of your kids online? Here’s what you should consider.. “Today’s parents are the first to raise children alongside social media and this generation of children is the first to grow up constantly ‘shared’ online. Stacey Steinberg, a professor at the University of Florida’s Levin College of Law is an expert on ‘sharenting’ and the intersection of parents’ and children’s rights in the online world. In this episode, Steinberg shares her thoughts on how these rights can collide and roles of parents, tech companies and government in keeping children safe. She also offers parents tips on what to consider as they and their children navigate social media.” Podcast with full transcript.

RESEARCH & OPINION

BirdLife International: The new Search for Lost Birds aims to find some of the rarest birds on Earth . “A new global search effort is calling on researchers, conservationists and the global birdwatching community to help find 10 rare bird species that have been lost to science. The Search for Lost Birds is a collaboration between Re:wild, American Bird Conservancy (ABC) and BirdLife International, with data support from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and its eBird platform used by birders around the world.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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December 18, 2021 at 01:38AM
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Friday CoronaBuzz, December 17, 2021: 72 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Friday CoronaBuzz, December 17, 2021: 72 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.
By ResearchBuzz

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

UPDATES

CNN: Flu and Covid-19 cases rising in much of the US. “US health officials are bracing for a trio of public health concerns this winter: more infections from the Omicron variant of the coronavirus, surging infections with the Delta variant, and a ‘slow but steady’ comeback of the flu.”

CBS 12: Omicron is dominant in wastewater samples in Florida county. “Even though there have been no cases of clinical infection, the new omicron variant is now the dominant strain of COVID-19 in the Florida county that is home to the nation’s largest theme park resorts. That’s based on wastewater samples.”

Local 10 News: ‘This is unprecedented’: Omicron causes 80% of coronavirus cases in Miami-Dade in 2 weeks. “The coronavirus’ omicron variant is rapidly replacing the delta variant, so public health officials at the federal and local levels are urging people to readopt preventive measures and get the booster shot. Dr. David Andrews, a University of Miami Health pathologist, reported omicron infected over 80% of the patients who recently tested positive for the coronavirus in Miami-Dade County. There was also evidence of omicron confirmed through wastewater epidemiology research.”

CORONAVIRUS MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

Medical Xpress: Social media analysis reveals new insights into antivax movement. “Analysis of social media posts in November and December 2021 shows the antivax movement is diverse and complex, with conflicting concepts and interpretations of freedom and human rights. The TIGER C19 project, run collaboratively between Burnet Institute and the University of Melbourne, has combined big data analytics of selected keywords and themes from Reddit and Twitter since the onset of COVID-19.”

Daily Beast: Anti-Vaxxer Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s House Party Guests Told to Get Vaccinated Before Coming. “An invitation for a holiday party at the home of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.—one of America’s most notorious anti-vaccine conspiracy theorists—reportedly urged guests to get tested or vaccinated for coronavirus before they came inside his house.”

Associated Press: Far-right using COVID-19 theories to grow reach, study shows. “The post is one of many that white supremacists and far-right extremists are using to expand their reach and recruit followers on the social media platform Telegram, according to the findings of researchers who sifted through nearly half a million comments on pages — called channels on Telegram — that they categorized as far-right from January 2020 to June 2021. The tactic has been successful: Nine of the 10 most viewed posts in the sample examined by the researchers contained misleading claims about the safety of vaccines or the pharmaceutical companies manufacturing them.”

MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING – IVERMECTIN

Washington Post: Court orders Virginia hospital to allow outside physician to provide ivermectin to covid-19 patient. “Christopher Davies said he was desperate to help his mother, who is critically ill with covid-19 and on a ventilator, when he read an article in late November about an Illinois family that turned to a treatment the Food and Drug Administration has strongly recommended against: ivermectin. Davies found a doctor to administer the anti-parasitic drug that has not been shown to be effective against the coronavirus. But the Virginia hospital where Kathleen Davies, 63, was being treated rejected the idea.”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

BBC: Kenyans find rural lifeline after Covid city exodus. “If the coronavirus pandemic had not happened, it is likely Jack Onyango would still be living alone, working in Kenya’s capital and sending money back to his wife and children in his faraway rural home.”

New York Times: We Asked 1,320 Therapists What They’re Hearing From Patients. “The New York Times asked 1,320 mental health professionals to tell us how their patients were coping as pandemic restrictions eased. General anxiety and depression are the most common reasons patients seek support, but family and relationship issues also dominate therapy conversations. One in four providers said suicidal thoughts were among the top reasons clients were seeking therapy.”

My News 13: Rising rent: Floridians face pricey dilemma. “Albert Harris-Russell and his partner Logan rent a one-bedroom apartment in downtown Orlando. The professional photographer said their rent is going up so much they now have to consider if they can stay, or if they’re being priced out. ‘Six months ago this apartment was going for $1,500 to $1,600,’ Harris-Russell said. ‘Now it’s jumped to almost $2,000.'”

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

The Daily Times: Inside these walls: An ICU doctor describes the enormity of challenges faced amid pandemic. “There has been an exodus of healthcare workers from our hospital. Like everywhere, we are sad, exhausted, disenchanted, angry, and burned-out. Many are seeking new professions, retiring, or are lured by travel wages and crisis pay. The healthcare sector has lost nearly half a million workers since 2020 and as many as 66% of critical care nurses have considered leaving the profession entirely. Paradoxically, the number of patients has grown significantly and they are sicker than ever. For those of us who remain, our arms and legs shake under the heavy weight of a healthcare system in duress.”

Houston Public Media: Houston hospitals are seeing a COVID-19 uptick fueled by the omicron variant. “Methodist confirmed a total of 307 positive COVID-19 tests on Monday and Tuesday of this week, according to the hospital. That’s up from 76 positive tests reported last Monday and Tuesday. Additionally, the hospital confirmed on Wednesday that 54 cases of the omicron variant have been identified by Methodist’s sequencing lab since early December. The seven-day rolling average last week was around 40 new cases a day, according to Dr. Marc Boom, Methodist president and CEO.”

MedPage Today: Medical Examiners Report Demands to Remove COVID From Death Certificates. “Medical examiners and coroners across the country have reported receiving requests to remove COVID-19 as the cause of death on death certificates, usually by a victim’s family members. In an interview with MedPage Today, James Gill, MD, chief medical examiner for the state of Connecticut, said he’s been asked to make that change a handful of times for a variety of reasons, and each time he’s declined.”

HEALTH CARE – CAPACITY

New York Times: Doctors and Nurses Are ‘Living in a Constant Crisis’ as Covid Fills Hospitals and Omicron Looms. “‘Living in a constant crisis for 20 months-plus is a little overwhelming,’ said Dr. Matthew Deibel, the medical director for emergency care at Covenant, where patients must sometimes wait hours to be seen because of a shortage of beds and staff. With coronavirus hospitalizations increasing 20 percent nationally over the last two weeks, to 68,000 people, doctors and nurses are speaking with renewed alarm about conditions and pleading with people to get vaccinated.”

EVENTS / CANCELLATIONS

CNN: Miss World 2021 postponed hours before finale amid Covid-19 outbreak. “This year’s Miss World competition, scheduled to take place Thursday in Puerto Rico, has been postponed after multiple people linked to the event — including 23 of the 97 contestants — tested positive for Covid-19.”

New York Times: When the Show Doesn’t Go On: Broadway Is Rattled by Covid Cancellations. “Broadway, where cancellations were once vanishingly rare, has seen a raft of them as positive coronavirus tests among cast and crew members have upended productions.”

INSTITUTIONS

New York Times: Met Opera to Mandate Booster Shots for Staff and Audiences. “It is the first major performing arts institution to require boosters, as concern mounts over rising coronavirus cases and the spread of the Omicron variant. The rule will take effect Jan. 17.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

New York Times: Offices Shut and Holiday Parties Dim as a Familiar Feeling Sinks In. “The United States is reporting an average of more than 120,000 new Covid cases each day, up 40 percent from two weeks ago, according to a New York Times database. New York City is experiencing a spike in cases larger than any since last winter. Employers that had been growing bolder in their plans — reopening offices, mandating or strongly suggesting that workers report back, promising holiday blowouts — are now scaling back their ambitions for in-person business and socializing.”

Bloomberg: Apple Scraps Office-Return Deadline Without Setting New Date. “Apple Inc., facing a resurgence in Covid-19 cases and a fast-spreading new variant, is delaying its corporate return-to-office deadline from Feb. 1 to a ‘date yet to be determined.’ ”

Bloomberg Quint: ‘I Was Wrong’: Omicron Wrecks CEOs’ Plans for Office Return. “Just as it seemed like corporate America was on a path toward normalcy, a new wave of Covid uncertainty is upending business plans from Wall Street to Silicon Valley. Manhattan holiday parties are being canceled and banks are contending with fresh outbreaks as the omicron variant spreads. Citigroup Inc. said staffers in the New York City metropolitan area can work from home through the holidays,”

Wall Street Journal: Covid-19 Vaccine Issues Create ‘General Hospital’ Drama and Increased Costs on Movie Sets. “In Hollywood, soap opera characters portrayed by vaccine skeptics are being killed off or shipped away, set crews for Walt Disney Co. ’s ‘Black Panther’ sequel and other projects are being reprimanded or reassigned, and some A-list stars won’t work with colleagues who haven’t gotten a jab.”

CNBC: Southwest CEO tests positive for Covid after unmasked Senate hearing with other airline chiefs. “Southwest Airlines CEO Gary Kelly has tested positive for Covid-19, the company said Friday, according to Reuters. The results came after a Senate hearing in which he and other airline chiefs and lawmakers weren’t wearing masks.”

Washington Post: Life after quitting: What happened next to the workers who left their jobs. “Stubborn inflation is threatening to eviscerate the value of raises, while workers’ savings, in part from sizable government checks during the pandemic, are evaporating. With yet another coronavirus wave now bearing down, the physical and mental health stresses of service-sector work are unyielding. While data on what happened next to those who quit is scant, recent analysis suggests that many workers who have left the fields of restaurant and hotel work — the two sectors with the most resignations — end up back in those industries or in similarly low-wage work in retail, according to the California Policy Lab at the University of California.”

UNITED STATES / UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

CNN: House oversight committee releases report detailing efforts of Trump administration officials to ‘undermine’ Covid-19 efforts in US. “The committee, which spent months working to interview former Trump officials, said the administration worked to undermine the public health response to the coronavirus pandemic by blocking officials from speaking publicly, watering down testing guidance and attempting to interfere with other public health guidance.”

Politico: HHS forecast shows Omicron stretching U.S. Covid testing supply. “Internal modeling developed by the Health and Human Services Department’s Testing and Diagnostic Working Group projects that the nation’s supply could be stretched by the need to conduct 3 to 5 million tests per day by late January or early February — a sharp increase from current daily levels of more than 1.6 million.”

Washington Post: As the omicron variant threatens to wipe out monoclonal antibodies, the U.S. is saving up one that will still work. “With the omicron variant of the coronavirus poised to thwart most covid-19 treatments, U.S. public health officials are stockpiling the one monoclonal antibody that remains effective so that it can be deployed when the variant becomes more prevalent.”

Politico: Biden’s Twitter doc army turns on him. “Administration officials have questioned whether being thrust into the Twitter and cable spotlight has compelled some health experts to embrace sharper, less nuanced positions on the pandemic fight. ‘Some of them get paid to have takes. We get paid to end this pandemic,’ one official quipped, drawing a bright line between the administration personnel working on the pandemic and those in its orbit who were engaging in Monday morning quarterbacking. Administration officials also downplayed the influence medical Twitter commentary had in shaping administration policy.”

NPR: Inflation is still red hot, and it’s forcing the Federal Reserve into a new game plan. “The Federal Reserve is paving the way for possible interest rate hikes next year, in an effort to contain stubbornly high inflation. At the conclusion of a two-day policy meeting Wednesday, the central bank announced plans to phase out its large-scale bond-buying program faster than initially planned. The Fed started purchasing bonds during the pandemic as a way to keep borrowing costs across the economy low and to prevent any market disruptions.”

NBC News: CDC recommends people not get J&J vaccine if Pfizer, Moderna are available. “People shouldn’t get the Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccine when the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna shots are available, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Thursday. The recommendation, from CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky, came hours after members of the agency’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices voted in favor of the guidance.”

Politico: More than 100 Marines kicked out of the service for refusing Covid vaccine. “The vast majorities of each service have received their shots. The Army and Navy are each at about 98 percent, while the Air Force stands at 97.5 percent and the Marine Corps at 95 percent.”

WORLD/COUNTRY GOVERNMENT

BBC: Covid: France to drastically restrict travel from UK. “France is tightening Covid restrictions for travellers arriving from the UK, as the government in Paris tries to slow the spread of the Omicron variant. The French prime minister’s office said that from Saturday all non-residents would have to give a compelling reason for travelling to France.”

BBC: Covid: People urged to socialise carefully as cases hit new record. “The prime minister and England’s chief medical officer have urged the public to be cautious if they socialise before Christmas, amid record UK Covid cases. At Wednesday’s news conference, Boris Johnson said he was not shutting pubs and restaurants but advised people to ‘think carefully before you go’.”

BBC: Dutch MP ordered to delete Covid Holocaust social media posts. “A right-wing Dutch MP has been ordered to delete social media posts comparing Covid restrictions to the Holocaust. Thierry Baudet, leader of the Forum for Democracy party, had said on Twitter that unvaccinated people were ‘the new Jews’ and ‘those who look away from the exclusions’ were ‘the new Nazis’.”

BBC: Queen cancels pre-Christmas family lunch as Omicron surges. “The Queen has cancelled her traditional pre-Christmas lunch for extended family as a precautionary measure following the UK’s surge in Omicron cases. A source said it was felt the annual event could put too many people’s Christmas plans at risk.”

AFP: Brazil regulator approves Covid vaccine for children. “Brazil’s health regulator approved the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine Thursday for use in children aged five to 11, joining a growing list of countries green-lighting vaccination for kids. However, it is not clear when the hard-hit South American country will begin vaccinating children, if at all.”

CNN: Canadians told to avoid nonessential international travel as Omicron spreads. “While Canadian government officials indicated that other restrictions may be announced in the coming days, the US-Canada border remains open and those traveling by land do not need to provide a negative Covid-19 test if their trip is shorter than 72 hours and they are fully vaccinated.”

STATE GOVERNMENT

CNY Central: State to partner with Syracuse University to expand COVID-19 wastewater testing program. “New York State Governor Kathy Hochul announced a new partnership between the New York State Health Department and Syracuse University to continue its groundbreaking and innovative study to analyze wastewater for COVID-19.”

Baltimore Sun: Maryland audit follows up on flaws in COVID-19 procurements, finds ‘lack of compliance’ and ‘ineffective monitoring’. “A review of emergency procurements for supplies in Maryland during the COVID-19 pandemic found ‘a lack of compliance’ in general with state regulations and ‘ineffective monitoring’ of payments, according to a report released Thursday by the Maryland Office of Legislative Audits.”

CNN: Abbott joins 6 other GOP governors in asserting Pentagon has no authority to punish unvaccinated National Guardsmen. “Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott asserted the Pentagon has no authority to punish unvaccinated members of the state National Guard, joining other Republican governors who have called on Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin to withdraw or otherwise nullify the military’s Covid-19 vaccine mandate.”

San Francisco Chronicle: Are California’s strict COVID mandates working? Here’s what the data shows. “With California approaching an unfathomable milestone of 75,000 coronavirus deaths and 5 million COVID-19 cases since the start of the pandemic, many are wondering if the state’s many mitigation measures — some of the most stringent in the nation — have made a tangible difference in reducing the toll of the virus.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

Associated Press: Chicago firefighters ordered to comply with vaccine mandate. ” An arbitrator has ruled that several unions representing Chicago firefighters and other city employees must follow Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s COVID-19 vaccination policy. ”

New York Post: High-ranking NYPD cops busted for submitting fake COVID vax cards. “Two high-ranking NYPD officers have been busted for allegedly submitting fake COVID-19 vaccination cards — and ‘numerous’ others are being probed in what could be a widespread department scam, The Post has learned.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

Essence: Bridal Bliss: After Meeting Online During Quarantine, Cheri And Tracey Said ‘I Do’ In A Museum A Year Later. “Thinking back to how Cheri met Tracey, she looks at is as “luck” — beginner’s luck, specifically. She was dipping her toe in the online dating pool for the first time. The pandemic had just taken a hold of everyday life and she knew that quarantining in her new home of Philadelphia (where she’d relocated for work) without any handsome prospects to interact with for an unidentified period of time would be unpleasant. Soon after creating a profile on Match.com, she connected with New Jersey-based Tracey and life changed — not just because of the virus.”

MarketWatch: Ex-Olympic speed skating medalist charged with stealing $10M in COVID-19 aid to help finance Elijah Wood movie. “A former U.S. Olympic speed skating champion has been indicted on charges that she fraudulently obtained $10 million in COVID-19 relief aid and used part of the money to help finance a film made by ‘Lord of the Rings’ star Elijah Wood.”

Local 10: Passenger wearing ladies’ thong as mask can’t fly United Airlines ever again . ” It was one passenger’s way of protesting the federal mask mandate by wearing a red thong on his face. The flight was leaving from Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport, but he didn’t take off. He was eventually kicked off the plane and is now banned from flying United Airlines. Adam Jenne said he is not crazy and he has a good reason for masking up with a thong.”

Detroit Metro Times: Trump-supporting Michigan sheriff wants charges filed against woman who criticized anti-maskers. “A Trump-adoring sheriff in Michigan is pursuing criminal charges against a Howell woman who called out anti-maskers on Twitter, drawing sharp criticism from legal experts. Livingston County Sheriff Mike Murphy investigated the tweets and handed the case over to prosecutors in hopes of initiating charges against Kasey Helton.”

SPORTS

SB Nation: Report: NFL could change COVID guidelines after Rams, Browns suffer outbreaks. “Multiple reports surfaced Wednesday afternoon that suggest the NFL plans to revisit its COVID-19 guidelines after 25 players were added to the reserve list in a single day.”

K-12 EDUCATION

CNN: ‘I’m hanging by a thread’. “The deadly shooting last month at a high school in Oxford, Michigan, is yet another reminder of the many stresses facing America’s educators, who are still struggling with the overwhelming challenges of teaching in a pandemic. Another surge in coronavirus infections — and the looming specter of a return to virtual or hybrid learning — is only adding to teachers’ anxiety.”

New York Post: NYC schools see record number of new COVID cases. “City schools set a new record for COVID cases Wednesday as the Department of Education knocked down talk of a systemwide shutdown. The DOE logged a total of 546 new positive coronavirus cases — 384 students and 162 teachers.”

Washington Post: CDC finds coronavirus testing of exposed children in schools can safely replace quarantine. “The CDC released two studies that show the effectiveness of what’s known as ‘test-to-stay.’ School districts across the country have tried this strategy, though it is not widely used….Typically, students who are deemed close contacts of someone who tests positive for the virus are sent home to quarantine, to make sure that people who may be carrying the virus, even without symptoms, do not infect others. The CDC studied test-to-stay alternative programs in Lake County, Ill., and Los Angeles County.

Fox 5 DC: 3 Prince George’s County schools close amid surge in COVID-19 cases. “Three schools in Prince George’s County are closing due to a recent surge in COVID-19 cases locally, according to a letter sent to the community.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

CBS Philly: Princeton University Limits Indoor Gatherings, Shifts Finals To Remote As COVID-19 Cases Rise. “Princeton University has made several changes to its COVID-19 protocols due to a recent increase in cases amongst undergraduates on campus. On Wednesday, the Ivy League school announced the entire Princeton community must cancel or postpone all indoor gatherings with food and beverages where face coverings can’t be worn.”

Baltimore Sun: University of Maryland cancels winter commencement amid ‘highest case counts we’ve seen this fall semester’. “The University of Maryland, College Park is canceling its winter commencement and other events through Wednesday amid a spike in COVID-19 cases, according to a message sent to the community late Thursday.”

New York Times: New York University is the latest college to cancel events over a coronavirus surge.. “New York University announced Wednesday that it was immediately canceling all ‘nonessential’ gatherings and events both on and off campus, including graduations, holiday parties, study groups and athletic competitions, because of surging rates of new coronavirus cases in the community.”

HEALTH

New York Intelligencer: Omicron Is About to Overwhelm Us. “The relative virulence of the new variant is still clouded by enormous amounts of uncertainty. Only one patient has died with Omicron, thus far, and it is not entirely clear if the coronavirus was even the true cause of death. But in part this lack of severe outcomes reflects just how early in the wave we still are, even in South Africa; the variant was first identified there just three weeks ago, which means many of the early cases are still running their clinical course, and we don’t yet know what the outcomes will be.”

Bloomberg: Long Covid Patients Face Fatigue, Poor Sleep Even After One Year. “About seven in 10 Covid long haulers continued to face symptoms like fatigue, muscle pain, lack of sleep and breathing difficulties 12 months after hospital discharge, a study led by the U.K.’s National Institute of Health Research found. There was no or very little improvement compared with seven months earlier.”

CNN: Preparing for a Delta/Omicron double surge. “The persistence of the Delta coronavirus variant, along with fear of the Omicron variant — which vaccines are not as effective at stopping — is complicating the US effort to emerge from the pandemic. The main piece of advice from the government on Omicron: get a vaccine booster.”

New York Times: Scientists Are Racing to Gauge the Threat of Omicron. “In South Africa, Omicron spread twice as fast as the highly infectious Delta variant. In Britain, officials have estimated that 200,000 people are becoming infected with Omicron every day. In Denmark, Omicron cases are doubling roughly every two days. And early data from the United States suggest that Americans will not be spared. ‘No part of the country will be safe from Omicron,’ said Shweta Bansal, a disease ecologist at Georgetown University.”

Bloomberg: New York Area Bears the Brunt of Omicron on Top of Delta. “We might get lucky and find omicron doesn’t lead to widespread severe sickness and death. Scientists have done laboratory studies showing that the standard two-dose mRNA vaccines are unlikely to offer much protection against omicron infection, though they might protect against serious disease. And those same experiments suggested that people who get a booster will get about 70% or 75% protection against symptomatic infection. But the Harvard Medical School scientists are alarmed at what’s happened since Thanksgiving, when the variant first came to people’s attention.”

New York Intelligencer: Well, Guess It’s About Time to Get COVID. “Suddenly this exceedingly transmissible variant (in combination with its forebear Delta) has arrived at our door with a pistol in its hand to inform us that the jig is finally up. And right now, the only reasonable response seems to be a sheepish, ‘What took you so long?'”

New York Times: Omicron Threatens Red America. “In the U.S., partisanship is the biggest factor determining vaccination rates. If Democratic voters made up their own country, it would be one of the world’s most vaccinated, with more than 91 percent of adults having received at least one shot. Only about 60 percent of Republican adults have done so. This vaccination gap has created a huge gap in death rates, one that has grown sharply during the second half of the year.”

Washington Post: There’s no mystery about what’s ‘broken’ in the country’s pandemic response. “What’s broken in the country is that there’s deep polarization in views of the pandemic between those who see it as a public-health crisis demanding precautionary measures and those who don’t. That polarization overlaps heavily with politics, a function in part of former president Donald Trump’s broader strategy related to the virus as he sought reelection: pretend it was not a big deal.”

San Francisco Chronicle: Does brand of vaccine booster matter for how well protected you’ll be against omicron?. “With the omicron coronavirus variant spreading at a rate that world health officials are calling unprecedented, a growing chorus of experts are saying that boosters are a must — and that people should get them as soon as possible. But does the type of vaccine you get for your booster matter to how protected you’ll be against omicron?”

RESEARCH

FT: ‘No evidence’ Omicron is less severe than Delta, say UK researchers. “There is at present ‘no evidence’ that the Omicron coronavirus variant is any less severe than the Delta strain, according to early findings from researchers at Imperial College London, which also highlighted the elevated risk of reinfection posed by Omicron and the need for booster shots to combat it.”

Bloomberg: Sinopharm, J&J, Sputnik Vaccines Are Weaker Against Omicron in New Study. “Researchers at the University of Washington and Swiss drugmaker Humabs Biomed SA analyzed the efficacy of six vaccines against the highly-infectious and most-mutated Covid variant. Only three out of 13 people who has taken both doses of Sinopharm’s shot showed neutralizing antibodies against omicron. For J&J, this metric dropped to one out of 12 samples. None of the 11 people fully vaccinated with Sputnik generated such antibodies.”

New York Daily News: Columbia University study shows omicron ‘markedly resistant’ to COVID vaccines, booster shots. “The draft study was led by renowned researcher Dr. David Ho and early evidence suggests the lightning quick-spreading strain is likely to cause a massive wave of so-called breakthrough infections even among fully vaccinated people.”

Nature: Omicron blindspots: why it’s hard to track coronavirus variants. “Researchers are racing to detect Omicron, the latest SARS-CoV-2 variant of concern, by sequencing the genomes of coronaviruses infecting people. But surveillance through genomic sequencing can be slow and patchy, complicating the picture of how and where Omicron spreads.”

New York Times: New Studies Raise Hopes That Vaccines Prevent Severe Disease From Omicron. “In the lab, immune cells put up a strong fight against Omicron, suggesting that vaccines will be able to prevent the worst outcomes of the virus variant.”

Business Insider: Is Omicron as infectious as it gets? Scientists lay out their best and worst scenarios for the virus’ future.. “Is Omicron as infectious as it gets? There’s no easy answer, but scientists have a few guesses about the virus’ future. In the best-case scenario, they say, the coronavirus will become endemic, which means cases will persist at low levels, and seasonal outbreaks of relatively mild disease may come as a result. In a middle-of-the-road scenario, the virus could get even better at resisting vaccines, and more vaccinated people could be exposed to severe illness. And in a frightening scenario, the virus could recombine with another coronavirus to form a more lethal hybrid variant.”

Sky News: COVID: Omicron variant multiplies 70 times faster than Delta in human airways, study finds. “The Omicron COVID variant multiplies 70 times faster than Delta in human airways, according to researchers. The study, by researchers in Hong Kong, also suggests the variant replicates less well in human lung tissue compared with the original strain of the virus – perhaps indicating a lower severity of disease.”

PUBLIC OPINION

The Guardian: More Americans are shifting away from religious affiliation, new study finds. “In 2007, only 16% of American adults surveyed by the Pew Research Center identified themselves as religious ‘nones’ – people who describe themselves as atheists, agnostics or “nothing in particular” when asked about their religious identity. That figure is now 29%, according to a new Pew research released on Tuesday.”

CRIME / SECURITY / LEGAL

NBC News: Court revives health worker Covid-19 vaccine mandate in 26 states. “A federal appeals court on Wednesday revived in 26 U.S. states a COVID-19 mandate issued by President Joe Biden’s administration requiring millions of healthcare workers to get vaccinated if they work in facilities that receive federal dollars.”

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December 18, 2021 at 12:50AM
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Boston Phoenix, Eyesight & Insight, Data Journalism, more: Friday ResearchBuzz, December 17, 2021

Boston Phoenix, Eyesight & Insight, Data Journalism, more: Friday ResearchBuzz, December 17, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Internet Archive: Boston Phoenix Rises Again With New Online Access. “For more than 40 years, The Boston Phoenix was the city’s largest alternative weekly in covering local politics, arts, and culture….With the advent of online advertising, it struggled like many independent newspapers to compete. In 2013, the Phoenix folded. After the publication shut down, owner Stephen Mindich wanted the public to be able to access back issues of the Phoenix.”

Seven Days Vermont: Shelburne Museum Focuses on Vision With the Online Exhibition ‘Eyesight & Insight’ . “The exhibition is entirely online, preceding a gallery installation that will open in May. For now, viewers can scroll through a thoughtfully curated selection of artworks in which sight — physical or metaphorical — is the through line. What enriches this theme is the interlacing of visual clarity and developments in science, literacy, entertainment and personal agency. ‘Eyesight & Insight’ is divided into four chapters, each with a different focus. The exhibition as a whole is about way more than spectacles.”

Global Investigative Journalism Network: GIJN’s Top 10 Data Journalism Projects of 2021. “Our weekly Top 10 in Data Journalism columns highlight the best data-driven stories, using NodeXL analysis of the most popular data stories on Twitter — and a healthy dose of human curation. To mark the end of the year, we have selected our top 10 projects of 2021, featuring the Pandora Papers, reports on climate change, a sonification of COVID-19, and more.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

CNET: Minecraft crosses 1 trillion views on YouTube, most popular game ever on platform. “Minecraft is already one of the best selling games ever made, up there with Tetris, Mario and Grand Theft Auto. Now it’s crossed a new milestone, counting more than 1 trillion views across YouTube.”

The Verge: Google Chrome’s last-minute holiday shopping tools track prices and abandoned carts. “With time ticking away before shipping deadlines put a stop to your online holiday shopping, Google is highlighting a few new Chrome features that might help you out.”

USEFUL STUFF

MakeUseOf: How to Input Data Into Excel Spreadsheets Using Your Phone’s Camera. “Your phone camera can do much more than just take and edit selfies. You can use it to scan QR codes, search for photos on Pinterest, or identify anything using advanced image recognition technology. But did you also know that you can use your phone camera to input data into your Excel spreadsheets? This simple but powerful technique can save you time and improve your productivity with sheets.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

New York University: Prof. Hilke Schellmann and NYU Researchers Secure $200,000 Grant to Bring Novel AI-Tool to Support Under-Resourced Newsrooms Across the U.S. . “The project will integrate the NYU-developed Gumshoe prototype – a Natural Language Processing Tool that identifies relevant and irrelevant sections in large text corpora – to help journalists effectively comb through thousands of Freedom of Information Request (FOIA) releases and other document sets. NYU will collaborate with MuckRock, an open source journalism platform used by tens of thousands of journalists across 4,000 newsrooms to help request, analyze, and publish public documents.”

Mashable: The best way to quit your job is to hire a celebrity on Cameo to do it for you . “The best way to hire someone famous to quit your job for you is to use Cameo, which lets people pay for custom videos — like a happy birthday message, a get well soon note, or anything else — from select celebrities. Cameo told Mashable its seen a 30 percent growth year-over-year on job quitting requests, from users like Chris Diamantopolous, All Felt No Filter Puppets, Chris Sapphire, and Colton Dunn.”

Kotaku: Kickstarter Announces Blockchain Future, Doubles Down After Users Say ‘No Thank You’. “Reaction has been swift and negative. The platform has long been on thin ice with many backers and creators, especially since its anti-union efforts from 2019-20; this has been seen by many as the final straw, and resulted in a week of protest and complaints, to the point where Kickstarter felt compelled today to issue a response. If you were thinking it would come in the form of an apology or a consideration of people’s feedback, well, lol.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Search Engine Journal: All In One SEO Vulnerability Affects +3 Million Sites. “Security researchers at Jetpack discovered two serious vulnerabilities in the All In One SEO Plugin. The vulnerabilities could allow a hacker to access usernames and passwords and also perform remote code execution exploits.”

BBC: How Russia tries to censor Western social media. “Google and Meta face the threat of multi-million-dollar fines for failing to delete content that the Russian government considers illegal – but a close look at court papers reveals these are often simply posts about protests in support of jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

EurekAlert: Decade-old photographs shared on social media give away a new species of pygmy grasshopper. “While scrolling through iNaturalist – a social network where professional and citizen scientists share their photographs, in order to map biodiversity observations from across the globe – a group of students from Croatia discovered a couple of curious pictures, taken in 2008 in the Peruvian rainforest and posted in 2018. What they were looking at was a pygmy grasshopper sporting a unique pattern of lively colors. The motley insect was nothing they have so far encountered in the scientific literature.” Good morning, Internet…

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December 17, 2021 at 06:29PM
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Thursday, December 16, 2021

Facebook Roundup, December 16, 2021

Facebook Roundup, December 16, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Mashable: Keanu Reeves on Facebook’s metaverse: ‘Can we just not’. “Keanu Reeves knows an agent of oppression when he sees one. The star of The Matrix trilogy and upcoming sequel, Resurrections, made that clear in a recent interview with The Verge, which touched on technology topics du jour like NFTs and the metaverse. And when it comes to the latter, Reeves has a very specific take: keep Facebook out of it.”

KnowTechie: Intel says the infrastructure the metaverse requires isn’t available to support it. “According to Intel, who makes many of the computer chips that power these internet-accessing devices we take for granted on a daily basis, the metaverse is going to require a shit-ton of computational power — at least 1,000 times what we’re capable of today as it pertains to efficiency.”

New York Times: Her Instagram Handle Was ‘Metaverse.’ Last Month, It Vanished.. “Five days after Facebook changed its name to Meta, an Australian artist found herself blocked, with seemingly no recourse, from an account documenting nearly a decade of her life and work.”

CNN: Top Meta exec blames users for spreading misinformation. “Individual users, not tech platforms, shoulder the responsibility for the spread of misinformation online, according to Andrew Bosworth, a top exec at Meta, the company formerly known as Facebook. In an interview over the weekend with Axios on HBO, Bosworth said it is not up to Meta to stifle the views of individuals who wish to express themselves by sharing their beliefs.”

The Verge: Oversight Board raises alarm over Facebook’s role in Ethiopian conflict. “Facebook has come under fire for its role in the Ethiopian conflict, with observers drawing parallels with the company’s role in the genocide of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar. There, an online campaign led by Myanmar military personnel stoked hatred against the Rohingya minority groups and led to acts of mass murder and ethnic cleansing. In Ethiopia, similar rumors and incitements to violence have been allowed to proliferate, despite numerous Facebook employees reportedly raising the alarm within the company.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Business Insider: Members of Congress publicly blast Facebook but quietly invest their savings in the social-media giant. “House Speaker Nancy Pelosi called Facebook shameful and irresponsible. Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon suggested prison time for the tech giant’s CEO, Mark Zuckerberg. Rep. Ro Khanna of California said Facebook should be broken up. But despite their tough talk toward the social-media behemoth, all three of those Democratic lawmakers or their spouses stood to gain financially from Facebook. They were among at least 32 lawmakers in the House and Senate — including both Democrats and Republicans — whose families held investments in the tech company during 2020, according to an Insider investigation of lawmakers’ most recent financial disclosures.”

MIT Technology Review: The metaverse has a groping problem already. “It’s not the first time a user has been groped in VR—nor, unfortunately, will it be the last. But the incident shows that until companies work out how to protect participants, the metaverse can never be a safe place.”

Yale Law School: Project’s Brief Says Consumer Protection Law Applies to Facebook. “The Tech Accountability & Competition (TAC) Project filed an amicus brief in the lawsuit Muslim Advocates v. Facebook urging the D.C. Superior Court to reject an argument raised by Facebook.”

Facebook: Taking Action Against the Surveillance-For-Hire Industry. “Recently, there has been an increased focus on NSO, the company behind the Pegasus spyware (software used to enable surveillance) that we enforced against and sued in 2019. However, NSO is only one piece of a much broader global cyber mercenary industry. Today, as part of a separate effort, we are sharing our findings about seven entities that we removed from our platform for engaging in surveillance activity and we will continue to take action against others as we find them.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Brookings Institution: Why we need a new agency to regulate advanced artificial intelligence: Lessons on AI control from the Facebook Files. “In this article, I lay out what we can learn about the AI Control Problem using the lessons learned from the Facebook Files. I observe that the challenges we are facing can be distinguished into two categories: the technical problem of direct control of AI, i.e. of ensuring that an advanced AI system does what the company operating it wants it to do, and the governance problem of social control of AI, i.e. of ensuring that the objectives that companies program into advanced AI systems are consistent with society’s objectives.”

CNN: Meta wants researchers to help it avoid having users’ personal data exposed online. “Meta, the company formerly known as Facebook, is asking for help in avoiding having personal data about its users scraped from its platforms and posted to the web. The social media giant announced Wednesday that it is expanding its bug bounty program — which offers rewards for helping identify and fix vulnerabilities in its apps — to include scraping, in a move Meta (FB) is calling an ‘industry first’ to address an ‘internet-wide’ challenge.”

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December 17, 2021 at 02:19AM
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Snapchat, Google Drive, Free Video Editors, More: Thursday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 16, 2021

Snapchat, Google Drive, Free Video Editors, More: Thursday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 16, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

CNET: Snapchat year in review: How to see and send your look back at 2021. “It’s mid-December, and Snapchat has joined Facebook, Instagram and Spotify in launching its year in review feature. A Look Back at 2021 will round up a random assortment of your snaps from the year across categories like pets, water, filters and staying in.”

TechRadar: Google Drive could soon start locking your files. “Google has announced a new policy for cloud storage service Drive, which will soon begin to restrict access to files deemed to be in violation of the company’s policies. As explained in a new blog post, Google will take active steps to identify files hosted on its platform that are in breach of either its Terms of Service or abuse program policies.” This policy really worries me. I’m concerned about false positives and political language being targeted by authoritarian governments. I hope a solid and fast appeal mechanism is in place.

USEFUL STUFF

MakeUseOf: Top 4 Free Video Editors for YouTube in 2022. “If you are passionate about a subject, you can be sure that you can find an audience on the platform. But attracting people to your content requires quality videos that stand out. And to produce such standout videos you need professional video editing software. Unfortunately, not everyone can afford these tools. Thankfully, there are plenty of free video editors for YouTube on the market.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

The Guardian: Distraction disaster! Notifications are ruining our concentration – here’s how to escape them. “Whether socialising with friends or completing a difficult task, a ping on your phone can destroy the moment. It is time to address the constant stream of interruptions.”

Surfer: Calling All History Buffs: Help Keep the Encyclopedia of Surfing Growing and Thriving. “Over the past decade-plus, author and surf historian Matt Warshaw has built the world’s most important digital archive of surf history, documenting wave riding’s past in a way that’s invaluable to generations past, present and future. Anyone who has a subscription to Encyclopedia of Surfing knows the feeling of falling swiftly down the rabbit hole of surfing’s yesteryear and discovering new things about our sport’s various icons. This holiday season, Warshaw is putting on fundraiser to help keep EOS thriving and if you’re feeling holly and jolly and in the giving mood, click here to be apart of EOS’s 2022 endeavors.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Brookings Institution: Texas’ new social media law is blocked for now, but that’s not the end of the story. “The coming months will thus see two different federal appeals courts weighing in on cases concerning one of the most important contemporary technology-related constitutional law questions: To what extent can the government regulate social media content moderation decisions without running afoul of the First Amendment?”

Bleeping Computer: DHS announces ‘Hack DHS’ bug bounty program for vetted researchers. “The new bug bounty program will use a platform developed by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and will be monitored by the DHS Office of the Chief Information Officer. Researchers who report security vulnerabilities as part of the Hack DHS program will be able to win monetary rewards of up to $5,000, depending on the flaw’s severity.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

University of New South Wales: Augmented reality project explores lived experience of disaster survivors. “An augmented reality project exploring the relationship between wellbeing and place will provide insight into why some people in adverse circumstances don’t always access mental health services. Hard place/Good place, led by UNSW Scientia Professor Jill Bennett as part of her Australian Research Council Laureate Fellowship, will develop an archive of experiential stories with people from regional, rural and remote areas, exploring what it means to be in a ‘hard place’ or a ‘good place’.”

WTSP: USF study finds people want more regulation on social media platforms. “Breaking down the numbers, a majority, 56% think social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter are having a very or somewhat negative effect on America’s political climate. Even more — 71% — agree posts or comments from political leaders and those with the most influence should be held to a higher standard.”

Defense One: Trollfare: How to Recognize and Fight Off Online Psyops. “EU President Ursula von der Leyen and others have correctly diagnosed Belarus’ use of migrants as part of a ‘hybrid attack’ against Europe’s democracies. But most have missed a key component of this and other such attacks: the psychological operations deployed online. The West must get better at detecting and countering them.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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December 17, 2021 at 01:43AM
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Medical Datasets, Log4j, Corporate Polluters, More: Thursday ResearchBuzz, December 16, 2021

Medical Datasets, Log4j, Corporate Polluters, More: Thursday ResearchBuzz, December 16, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Recently launched, apparently, and discovered on Twitter: Nightingale Open Science. From the docs page: “Today, health data are mostly locked up in small sandboxes, controlled by a handful of private companies or well-resourced researchers. Nightingale Open Science aims to unlock those data, securely and ethically, and make them available for the public good…. Our datasets are curated around medical mysteries—heart attack, cancer metastasis, cardiac arrest, bone aging, Covid-19—where machine learning can be transformative.”

PR Newswire: WhiteSource Launches Free Tool to Detect and Remediate Log4j Vulnerabilities (PRESS RELEASE). “This free developer tool, which is hosted on GitHub and is now available for use, quickly scans projects to find vulnerable Log4j versions and provides the exact path — both to direct or indirect dependencies — along with the fixed version for speedy remediation. As a standalone tool, developers can download the utility that matches their platform, run it within the terminal, and run the scan command on the root folder of the project.” WhiteSource will be having a Webinar about Log4j on December 20.

University of Massachusetts Amherst: Latest Toxic 100 And Greenhouse 100 Lists Name Top Air And Water Polluters, Climate Gas Emitters In The U.S.. “Researchers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst Political Economy Research Institute (PERI) today published the newest editions of its lists of the top corporate air and water polluters and top greenhouse gas emitters in the United States, based on the most recent data available from the Environmental Protection Agency.”

National Archives: National Archives Releases New Group of JFK Assassination Documents. “In accordance with President Biden’s directive of October 22, 2021, the National Archives today posted 1,491 documents subject to the President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992 (JFK Act). Released documents are available for download.”

Cornell Chronicle: Rural humanities projects explore NYS past and present. “‘In 1850, the federal census recorded 19 black residents in the Town of Caroline in Tompkins County.’ That’s the first line of Ethan Dickerman’s essay about the Tompkins County Rural Black Residents Project, a website he created that details where Black residents in the county lived from 1820 to 1870.” This is one of several projects exploring Black history in rural New York.

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

TechCrunch: Google’s Area 120 launches Qaya, a service offering web storefronts for digital creators. “A team at Google is today launching a new service called Qaya, which will allow creators to easily set up new web storefronts where they can sell their products and services directly to their audiences. The project is the latest to emerge from Google’s in-house project incubator, Area 120, which was recently a part of a broader reorganization at the company that elevated its status after many of its earlier projects exited to different parts of Google, including its Cloud, Search, Shopping and Commerce divisions.”

USEFUL STUFF

MakeUseOf: 3 Easy TikTok Transitions: A Beginner’s Guide. “Sometimes, TikTok can look like pure magic. For instance, when a video that starts with someone in their bedhead and natural complexion, changes instantly into a fabulously made-up face with a flawless blow-dry. Or, when a TikTok creator changes their whole outfit with a little jump and the snap of their fingers. From the outside, these TikTokers look like master cinematographers who have years of film-editing experience. However, once you get to know how the app works, you can see that these transitions are not that hard to achieve, even for someone who’s just starting out.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

The Guardian: Strange, horny game ads are flooding social media. I accidentally became obsessed. “Mildly tamer versions of this ad have been bombarding me on social media for months now. You might have seen them yourself. They’re for an array of different mobile games – Choices, Whispers, Chapters, Episode – which each offer a range of visual interactive stories, usually romantic, in which you control a protagonist and periodically make narrative choices that affect the story’s outcome.”

Columbia Journalism Review: Online censorship is growing in Modi’s India. “Using a combination of web scraping, APIs, and text extraction from hundreds of legal notices given to Twitter (sourced from the Lumen database, a Harvard University initiative monitoring global content removals), I created a series of datasets to better understand the nature and magnitude of the content that the Indian government wiped from Twitter.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Consumer Financial Protection Bureau: CFPB Calls Tech Workers to Action. “Clear, actionable information is critical for workers when they’re deciding how to raise concerns and consider becoming whistleblowers. I am pleased to announce the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) has used human-centered design, including usability testing, to streamline how tech workers can alert us to potential violations of federal consumer financial laws.”

The Verge: Algorithms that detect cancer can be fooled by hacked images. “Artificial intelligence programs that check medical images for evidence of cancer can be duped by hacks and cyberattacks, according to a new study. Researchers demonstrated that a computer program could add or remove evidence of cancer from mammograms, and those changes fooled both an AI tool and human radiologists.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

North Carolina State University: Wildlife Scientists Are Solving Big Data Problems to Track Animals Around the Globe. “In a new study, [Roland] Kays and researchers from the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior and other sites around the world published a paper in the journal Methods of Ecology and Evolution on technology they’ve developed to analyze, visualize and store data in the new ‘golden age’ of wildlife tracking. The study describes Movebank, a free set of tools to help researchers address the big data problems of wildlife tracking. Scientists are already using it to manage more than 3 million new data records generated each day.” 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!



December 16, 2021 at 06:35PM
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Wednesday, December 15, 2021

CryptoComics, Bill Mauldin, United States Building Stock, More: Wednesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 15, 2021

CryptoComics, Bill Mauldin, United States Building Stock, More: Wednesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 15, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

The Conversation: Comic book introduces kids to key concepts and careers in cybersecurity. “Led by a team of educators and researchers, CryptoComics strategically integrates a digital comic book, apps and unplugged activities, such as painting rocks with ancient symbols and making invisible ink. It also features stories about cybersecurity professionals who are women.”

Patch Chicago: Pritzker Military Museum & Library Launches Virtual Exhibition. “On Monday, December 13, the Pritzker Military Museum & Library (PMML) launched a virtual experience of its popular Museum exhibit: ‘Drawn to Combat: Bill Mauldin and the Art of War.’ The extraordinary live exhibit, currently on display at the PMML through April 2022, features nearly 150 of the Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist’s original drawings and published cartoons, as well as personal material from Bill Mauldin’s exceptional career.” This exhibit does have a modest admission fee ($7 for PMML non-members.)

GlobeNewswire: Researchers Publish First Comprehensive Building Stock Characterization Study for the United States (PRESS RELEASE). “A new report and online dashboard by the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) is the first comprehensive characterization and segmentation of the U.S. building stock, providing a national typology of buildings. Titled U.S. Building Stock Characterization Study: A National Typology for Decarbonizing U.S. Buildings, Part 1: Residential, the report provides key decisionmakers a foundational tool to identify technology requirements and engineering solutions for moving the existing U.S. building stock toward a net-zero-carbon future.” This press release left me blank until I looked up building stock and discovered that it’s just what it says on the tin — an inventory of buildings in an area.

USEFUL STUFF

MakeUseOf: GitHub vs. GitLab: Which Is Better for You?. “If you find it hard to pick between GitLab and GitHub, your indecisiveness is valid. Both of these platforms are renowned for their outstanding results in version control for private software and open source projects. Although both are competent enough, this very competence makes it hard to choose which of the two will work for you and your team. That is why this article will break down characteristics like price, features, CI and CD, amongst others, to help you arrive at the best choice.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Axios: Internet Association, once a top tech lobby, is set to dissolve. “The Internet Association (IA), once the tech industry’s top lobbying shop in Washington, representing companies such as Google, Facebook, Amazon and Microsoft, will dissolve as soon as Wednesday, a source familiar with the situation confirmed to Axios.”

Tubefilter: Snapchat Spotlight Has Paid Out $250 Million To 12,000 Creators In One Year. “Since launching its Spotlight platform for user-generated content one year ago, which rewards creators with for creating top-viewed videos, Snapchat says it has paid out over $250 million to more than 12,000 creators.”

Tom’s Guide: Google ‘innovative AR device’ reportedly on the way with all-new OS. “Google’s attempts to conquer the world of augmented and virtual reality haven’t met with much success. But it sounds as if the company is ready to give it another go. In a LinkedIn post, Mark Lucovsky, Google’s new senior director of engineering, operating systems and AR, says that the company is looking to fill key roles on the team responsible for building an augmented reality OS.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Mashable: Online reviews shaped the internet as we know it. Now they might be in danger. . “The pandemic, and the boom in online shopping that it brought on, put a spotlight on online reviews, as well as the duplicity that sometimes surrounds them, while chatter of either axing or tweaking the bill that allowed online reviews to exist in the first place has ramped up too. Together, those factors invite a perilous question: What would we stand to lose if we lost online reviews?”

The Verge: LastPass is going to become an independent company. “LogMeIn plans to spin out password management tool LastPass as a standalone company, it announced Tuesday. With the change, LastPass is promising that customers will receive enhancements on an ‘accelerated timeline’ next year. ‘With a team solely dedicated to its continued innovation and growth, [LastPass] will be able to deliver even more strongly for users,’ a spokesperson said.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Defense One: This New AI Tool Can Help Spot an Imminent Invasion. “Just how many jets, cargo planes, and other military vehicles is Russia deploying to the border of Ukraine? Answering that sort of question is a labor-intensive project for analysts, requiring them to pore through satellite photos to find and classify specific objects. A new tool from data analysis firm Orbital Insight could change that.” 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!



December 16, 2021 at 01:37AM
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