Monday, January 3, 2022

Monday CoronaBuzz, January 3, 2022: 56 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Monday CoronaBuzz, January 3, 2022: 56 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.

UPDATES

New York Times: With Omicron’s Rise, Americans Brace for Returning to School and Work. “In two short weeks, as the year closed out, the Omicron variant drove coronavirus case counts to record levels, upended air travel and left gaping staffing holes at police departments, firehouses and hospitals. And that was at a time many people were off for the holiday season. Now comes Monday, with millions of Americans having traveled back home to start school and work again, and no one is sure of what comes next.”

CNET: Free at-home COVID tests: Where are they?. “We’ll share what we know now, and will continue to update this story as we learn more details, including when the federal reimbursement program starts and exactly how it will work.”

CORONAVIRUS MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

Snopes: Did Betty White Say She Got COVID Booster 3 Days Before She Died?. “When beloved American actor and comedian Betty White died at the age of 99 on Dec. 31, 2021, no specific cause of death was immediately made public, though police said she appeared to have died from natural causes. With the COVID-19 pandemic still a major public health concern, social media rumor-mongers were quick to invent a specific cause of death out of whole cloth: White, they claimed, died just three days after supposedly receiving a COVID-19 vaccine booster shot on Dec. 28.”

Poynter: No, public health officials aren’t passing off the common cold as the omicron variant. “In February 2020, as the earliest COVID-19 cases cropped up in the U.S., the late conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh told his listeners there was no need to worry. ‘The coronavirus is the common cold, folks,’ he said, pushing a false claim that would soon be repeated widely online. Nearly two years later, and after millions of people have died worldwide from the coronavirus and its variants, social media users are still taking up the refrain.”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

Washington Post: In coronavirus-hit Mexico, many women are ‘determined to not have babies’. “Everyone knew the pandemic would bring death. Edith García Díaz thought it would also bring birth — lots of birth. As a state health official, she worried the crisis would impede access to contraceptives, leading to a rise in pregnancies…. But as the data trickle in, one state after another has reported the opposite tendency. Births in Mexico dropped 11 percent in the first six months of this year compared with the same period in 2020, according to preliminary Health Ministry data.”

Los Angeles Times: Car crash deaths have surged during COVID-19 pandemic. Here’s why. “It was a tally that shocked the experts: 38,680 deaths on U.S. roadways last year, the most since 2007, even though pandemic precautions had dramatically reduced driving…. He was wrong. The latest evidence suggests that after decades of safety gains, the pandemic has made U.S. drivers more reckless — more likely to speed, drink or use drugs and leave their seat belts unbuckled.”

Florida Politics: COVID-19 pandemic is still keeping women in Florida from the workforce. “According to a report from the Hamilton Project, before the pandemic, women were having a historic moment in labor. Between December 2019 and February 2020, there were more women in the workforce than men, and women had overtaken men in the workforce during a period of job growth for the first time.”

ACTIVISM / PROTESTS

The National News: Arrests and clashes as thousands protest against Dutch Covid measures. “Thousands of protesters defied authorities and gathered in the Dutch capital Amsterdam on Sunday to oppose coronavirus restrictions, leading to clashes and arrests. ‘This is Holland! Power to the people!’ chanted one protester. The demonstrators rallied in one of the city’s main squares, despite Dutch authorities banning the protest beforehand.”

HEALTH CARE – CAPACITY

ABC 15 Arizona: Embry Health to request help from Governor Doug Ducey amid record-breaking COVID-19 test surge. “Embry Health CEO Raymond Embry said he plans to send a letter to Arizona Governor Doug Ducey requesting that he mobilize the National Guard to help support Embry and other COVID-19 testing companies across Arizona. Embry said his company is seeing a record-breaking surge in testing. He anticipates they will hit 30,000 patients to be tested across the state Monday. Just two weeks ago, Embry Health’s previous testing record was 18,000 patients in one day.”

CBS Philly: COVID-19 Surge Forces Main Line Health To Pause All Elective Surgeries, Procedures For 2 Weeks. “Main Line Health has announced it is pausing all elective surgeries and procedures for the next two weeks. Officials say they made the decision in order to make room for the surge in COVID-19 patients and to make sure there is enough staffing.”

Local 10: Staffing shortage amid COVID surge shuts down labor and delivery unit at Holy Cross Health. “Staffing shortages at a South Florida hospital amid the surge in COVID-19 cases has forced the shutdown of an entire department there. The rise in infections also has local officials opening new testing sites in South Florida.”

NBC New York: NJ COVID Hospitalizations Up Another 10%, Now at May 2020 Levels. “COVID-19 hospitalizations in New Jersey spiked another 10% over the weekend, quickly rising to levels last seen in the first week of May 2020. As of Saturday, 4,715 people were hospitalized in the state with the virus, a net increase of 441 people from the prior day. (Hospital data is a day in arrears on the state’s dashboard, so the Saturday total was posted early Monday morning.)”

WSB Atlanta: Georgia could see 40,000 daily COVID-19 cases in next two weeks, model projects. “More than 3,300 people are currently hospitalized with COVID-19 in Georgia hospitals, compared to less than 1,000 at the end of November. More than 1,000 Georgians have been hospitalized with COVID-19 in just the last week.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

Bangor Daily News: More local farmers relying on social media to help survive the pandemic. “Maine farmers aren’t strangers to social media, but the pandemic made the need for a robust and responsive social media presence even clearer for many of them. Farming organizations over the past few years have offered more social media training, and Maine’s farmers have reaped the benefits.”

UNITED STATES / UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

US Department of Defense: Statement by Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III on COVID Status. “I tested positive this morning for COVID-19. I requested the test today after exhibiting symptoms while at home on leave. My symptoms are mild, and I am following my physician’s directions. In keeping with those directions, and in accordance with CDC guidelines, I will quarantine myself at home for the next five days. ”

PR Newswire: Coronavirus (COVID-19) Update: FDA Takes Multiple Actions to Expand Use of Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccine. “Today, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration amended the emergency use authorization (EUA) for the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccine to: * Expand the use of a single booster dose to include use in individuals 12 through 15 years of age. * Shorten the time between the completion of primary vaccination of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccine and a booster dose to at least five months. * Allow for a third primary series dose for certain immunocompromised children 5 through 11 years of age.”

WORLD/COUNTRY GOVERNMENT

Reuters: Botswana’s president in isolation after testing positive for COVID-19 . ” Botswana’s President Mokgweetsi Masisi is in mandatory self- isolation after testing positive for COVID-19 in routine testing, a government spokesperson said on Monday.”

Associated Press: How will pandemic end? Omicron clouds forecasts for endgame . “Pandemics do eventually end, even if omicron is complicating the question of when this one will. But it won’t be like flipping a light switch: The world will have to learn to coexist with a virus that’s not going away. The ultra-contagious omicron mutant is pushing cases to all-time highs and causing chaos as an exhausted world struggles, again, to stem the spread. But this time, we’re not starting from scratch.”

Reuters: UK’s Johnson will ‘continue on same path’ in tackling COVID. “British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the right measures were in place to tackle the surge in COVID-19 cases caused by the Omicron variant given the high levels of vaccination in the country.”

Reuters: “We will not yield,” French lawmaker says after death threats over COVID vaccine pass. “French lawmakers said on Monday they would not be cowed by death threats that dozens of them received over a bill that will require people to show proof of vaccination to go to a restaurant or cinema or take the train. The new law, which would remove the option of showing a negative test result instead of having the jabs, has the backing of most parties and is almost certain to be passed by the lower house in a vote late on Monday or early Tuesday.”

BBC: Covid: Scotland hits record number of new cases. “A further 20,217 people have tested positive for Covid-19 in Scotland, the highest daily figure of the pandemic. The Public Health Scotland figures are the first to be published in 2022 – after the last tranche released on 29 December also showed record cases.”

STATE GOVERNMENT

Tap Into Morristown: NJ First Lady Tammy Murphy Tests Positive for COVID. “While Mrs. Murphy is said to be ‘asymptomatic’, the Governor and First Lady tested themselves due to a recent contact with an individual (a non-family member) in their home. Governor Murphy and the rest of the family have tested negative, and they will continue to test regularly in the coming days according to his office.”

Iowa Public Radio: Health officials ask Iowans to report at-home COVID-19 test results to health department. “Public health officials are asking Iowans who test positive for COVID-19 using an at-home rapid test to report the results to their local health department. The demand for at-home testing has increased as the highly transmittable omicron variant drives a spike in new infections. But local health officials say unlike the tests that are run through the State Hygienic Lab or hospitals and clinics, at-home test results aren’t reported to public health officials.”

Salt Lake Tribune: How Spencer Cox navigated the COVID pandemic during his first year as Utah governor. “On the last day of August 2021, 1,677 Utahns tested positive for the coronavirus. Nearly 500 of Utah’s hospital beds were filled with COVID-19 patients, with about 50 new patients hospitalized each day. Lines at test sites were so long that patients were relieving themselves in bushes. Thirteen Utahns had died from the coronavirus one day earlier. That was the day Gov. Spencer J. Cox stopped doing regular public updates focused on the pandemic.”

WVPE: Coronavirus: State reports 12,000+ cases in one day, Holcomb ‘blindsided’ by Rokita comments. “Indiana reports more than 12,000 new COVID-19 cases in a single day. State health officials raise the alarm about Indiana’s overwhelmed hospitals. And Gov. Eric Holcomb said he was ‘stunned’ by Attorney General Todd Rokita’s comments saying he ‘doesn’t believe any numbers any more.’ ”

9 News NBC: 18th Judicial District suspends jury trials due to COVID. “The 18th Judicial District in Colorado is suspending jury trials and moving to remote operations due to high COVID-19 case counts. On Dec. 30, Chief Judge Michelle Amico issued the order that is effective from Jan. 3 through Jan. 28.”

WDTV: WVa officials warn of message scam over COVID vaccine status. “West Virginia health officials are warning residents to ignore spam text messages concerning their COVID-19 vaccine status. The Department of Health and Human Resources said it has received reports of people receiving messages asking them to validate their driver’s license through the Division of Motor Vehicles in partnership with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

Hays Post: Kansas City Mayor and family test positive for COVID. “Mayor Quinton Lucas reported on New Year’s Eve he had tested positive for the virus despite being vaccinated and receiving a booster dose.”

The Morning Call: LANTA cancels bus routes Monday due to COVID absences; Allentown School District also facing transportation woes. “LANTA is canceling some bus trips Monday because many drivers are out sick with COVID-19, the transportation agency said…. The cancellations are only for Monday, the authority said, though further decisions are made on a day-to-day basis.” LANTA is the bus service for Allentown, Pennsylvania.

KFOR: COVID-19 closes food pantry in Norman. “Residents who are in need in Norman may go without help after an outbreak of COVID-19 at a local food pantry. On Dec. 31, Food and Shelter announced that its main pantry staff and volunteers had all been infected with COVID-19.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

San Antonio Express-News: ‘The odds were not in his favor’: San Antonio man survives COVID-19 but pays a price. “Albert Bañuelos could sense the darkness. In his delirium, he saw things he doesn’t like to talk about. He doesn’t want to remember. ‘I had to get out of there,’ said Bañuelos, 43. ‘Your brain is on, but it’s playing a trick on you.’ He contracted the delta variant of the coronavirus in early September and was admitted to Methodist Hospital Northeast in Live Oak. As he struggled to breathe, doctors placed him in a medically induced coma. Machines pumped medicine into his body. For 4½ days, Bañuelos breathed through a tube inserted into his trachea and attached to a mechanical ventilator.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS – CELEBRITIES/FAMOUS

MetalSucks: David Lee Roth Cancels Two Farewell Shows Due to Covid-19 Case in His Band. “David Lee Roth canceled the first two shows of his planned Las Vegas ‘farewell’ residency due to a case of Covid-19 in an unnamed member of his backing band.”

SPORTS

SwimSwam: Research Shows No Covid-19 Spread Between Tokyo Athletes, Local Residents. “The Japanese Government released a study that confirmed there was no spread of COVID-19 between Tokyo athletes and the local population. Genomic sequencing research confirms that positive cases among athletes and Japanese residents were unrelated. The International Olympic Committee (IOC) cited this data to highlight the success of the coronavirus countermeasures that were implemented.”

K-12 EDUCATION

News 12 New Jersey: Some school districts switch to remote learning due to COVID-19. “Schools across the Hudson Valley are returning to classes today but students in certain districts will be doing so via remote learning. Yonkers Public Schools, New Rochelle schools and the Ossining Union Free school district are going virtual for its return from the holiday break.”

WFSB: Handful of CT schools closures, delays due to COVID, staffing shortages. “Several school districts announced closures or delays for Jan. 3 because of COVID-related staffing issues or transportation problems. Region 14, Enfield, Stratford, and Stonington public schools were closed on Monday. Other districts, such as Bethany, Danbury, New Fairfield, and Shelton posted two hour delays.”

WCVB: 155 Boston public school teachers, staffers test positive for COVID-19 in last 2 days, Supt. Dr. Brenda Cassellius says. “More than 150 Boston Public Schools teachers, staffers and administrators have tested positive for COVID-19 in the last two days and the district and city are making plans to keep classes in session. As of Monday morning, Boston Superintendent Dr. Brenda Cassellius said 155 teachers and school staffers have reported positive COVID-19 tests — a number that is expected to rise.”

San Diego Union-Tribune: How school counselors are helping children cope during COVID. “Many students returned to school campuses full time this year with trauma in tow. Many had struggled with distance learning, suffered through mental health issues and endured social isolation and challenges at home due to the pandemic. The job of helping students recover fell largely to school counselors, a chronically understaffed profession tasked with tending to students’ social, mental and academic needs.”

Associated Press: Milwaukee schools going virtual due to staff COVID-19 cases. “Wisconsin’s largest school district, Milwaukee Public Schools, will transition to virtual instruction beginning Tuesday because of an increase in staff testing positive for COVID-19.”

NBC Chicago: Thousands of COVID Tests ‘Invalid’ as CPS Prepares to Return From Winter Break. “Thousands of COVID tests for Chicago Public Schools students and staff members have been deemed ‘invalid’ as the district prepares for a return to classrooms following the winter break. With cases across the state and within the district surging, CPS reported 35,590 tests were completed between Dec. 26 and Jan. 1, but 24,843 were ruled ‘invalid,’ according to data posted on the district’s website.”

Patch Detroit: Detroit Schools Pause Return, Announce COVID-19 Testing Changes. ” Detroit Public Schools canceled all classes Monday through Wednesday due to COVID-19 concerns, and said it will update information for Thursday and Friday on Wednesday, superintendent Nikolai Vitti said in a statement.”

WTTW: CTU Members to Consider Walk Out This Week as COVID-19 Cases Spike. “As Chicago Public Schools students and staff returned Monday from winter break amid an ongoing spike in COVID-19 cases, members of the Chicago Teachers Union are planning a vote that could lead to an unauthorized walkout later this week. The CTU’s membership and House of Delegates will vote this week to decide whether to continue working in-person or to begin working remotely as of Wednesday as concerns about student and teacher safety grow.”

The Journal (Ireland): ‘Sinister’: Anti-lockdown groups sharing database of school principals’ contact details. “ANTI-LOCKDOWN GROUPS are sharing a large database containing information on the principals of nearly every primary school in the country, urging people to contact them to probe their views on vaccinations and mask wearing.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

WCHS: Marshall to require COVID testing, mask wearing for all students. “Marshall University officials said the school will test all on-campus students at the start of the semester for COVID-19 – regardless of vaccination status – and masks will be required in all university buildings. The school said in a news release Friday that the student testing policy is being implemented due to increased community spread of COVID-19.”

HEALTH

WVIR: UVA Health doctors encourage upgrading your masks with omicron. ” As the omicron variant continues to spread, many experts are advising you to upgrade your mask. More drug stores around Charlottesville are selling them, which is why doctors are encouraging you to get your hands on one. ‘The big thing is they’re more widely available now,’ Dr. Bill Petri with UVA Health said. ‘Early on, N95 or KN95 masks were being reserved for health care professionals.’ Petri says now, since they are accessible, they’re being recommended and encouraged for everyone.”

Mother Jones: Desperate Patients Are Shelling Out Thousands for a Long Covid Cure. Is It for Real?. “When Owen came down with Covid-19 in April 2021, he felt lucky to get away with a mild case. After a few days of a runny nose, he returned to his regular routine, including long sessions at the gym. But three weeks later, Owen, who was 25 at the time and working as an art director in Manhattan, began to have trouble breathing. It got so bad one day that he collapsed in his kitchen. Later, at the emergency room, doctors searched for a cause but could find none, so they sent him home. That was only the beginning of Owen’s ordeal.”

Montana Public Radio: COVID-19 was the leading killer of Native Americans in Montana last year. “According to a review of death certificates by the Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services, deaths among American-Indian and Alaska Natives spiked 36 percent in 2020 compared to the previous five years, largely due to COVID-19. The analysis shows the rate of COVID deaths among American Indian and Alaska Native people in Montana was also over double that of Indigenous people across the entire country.”

RESEARCH

Laboratory Equipment: Study: Metabolic Conditions Increase Ventilation Risk by 45% in COVID-19 Patients. “Patients hospitalized with COVID-19 who had a combination of high blood pressure, obesity, diabetes, or other conditions associated with metabolic syndrome were at much higher risk of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and death, according to an international study published in the medical journal JAMA Network Open.”

The Malaysian Reserve: Sinovac booster effective for Sinovac primary recipients. “PRELIMINARY results from an ongoing study have shown that Sinovac vaccine booster can activate cellular immunity against Omicron variant, in subjects who previously received two doses of the vaccine as primary series. The study is being carried out by the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile (UC) and led by Professor Dr Alexis M Kalergis, director of Immunology and Immunotherapy Millennium Institute.”

NewsWise: A potential at-home COVID-19 test is just as good as laboratory PCR tests, according to preclinical data. “Researchers at the University of Illinois Chicago have designed a high-quality assay that can be used in at-home tests for rapid COVID-19 screening. Results from an early preclinical study suggest that tests with the new assay may be just as reliable as the laboratory-based molecular tests — called PCR tests — used by hospitals for clinical diagnostics.”

OUTBREAKS

New Zealand Herald: Covid 19 Delta outbreak: Six cases linked to Auckland’s Pelican Club. “Six people linked to an adult entertainment club in Auckland have tested positive for Covid-19. Health officials have revealed multiple exposure events at Pelican Club on Auckland’s Eden Terrace across several different dates.”

Gaston Gazette: Gaston County’s COVID cases up 163.8%; North Carolina cases surge 332.7%. “New coronavirus cases leaped in North Carolina in the week ending Sunday, rising 332.7% as 79,289 cases were reported. The previous week had 18,324 new cases of the virus that causes COVID-19.”

ABC 7: LA County reports nearly 45,000 new COVID cases over weekend. “Los Angeles County reported nearly 45,000 new cases of COVID-19 this weekend, an alarmingly high number in light of the typical delays in weekend reporting. Officials reported 23,553 new cases for Saturday and another 21,200 positive tests for Sunday after a one-day record of 27,091 new infections were reported Friday.”

BBC: Covid-19: At least 120 outbreaks in care homes in Northern Ireland. “At least 120 care homes in Northern Ireland were dealing with Covid-19 outbreaks over the weekend, NI’s Public Health Agency (PHA) has said. As Omicron cases rise, the Western Trust has suspended visits to its care homes and hospitals. Independent care homes provide their own guidance.”

CRIME / SECURITY / LEGAL

WSAW: Family courts navigate COVID-19 vaccine disagreements. ” Courts are having to mediate new disputes between divorced parents as the COVID-19 vaccines are approved for younger populations. They are seeing disagreements between the parents on whether shared children should get the shot. In the case of separation or divorce, parents have to come to a custody agreement as to whether one parent gets sole custody making decisions for the children or if it is shared. This can impact issues such as non-emergency medical treatments, what school the child goes to and religion.”

Spanish News Today: Seventy Americans busted at New Years Eve orgy in Barcelona. “People across Spain naturally choose to ring in the New Year in a variety of ways, but a large group of US citizens raised eyebrows when they were discovered partaking in an orgy in the Barcelona town of Lliçà d’Amunt. The sex party, involving around 70 guests, was uncovered when two participants got lost and tried to enter another nearby property.”

OPINION

Nature: Two years of COVID-19 in Africa: lessons for the world. “Since the 1960s, when many African countries gained independence, the continent has largely depended on the outside world for its health-security commodities: diagnostics, therapeutics and vaccines, as well as personal protective equipment and other medical supplies. The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed how easily international cooperation and multilateral agreements can dissolve, especially in the face of a global crisis — and just how vulnerable this dependence leaves Africa.”

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January 3, 2022 at 09:29PM
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18th Century Scotland, North Carolina Newspapers, Hungary Photography, More: Monday ResearchBuzz, January 3, 2022

18th Century Scotland, North Carolina Newspapers, Hungary Photography, More: Monday ResearchBuzz, January 3, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

The Herald: Digitising old Court of Session records reveals fascinating detail of Scottish life. “The case between Lieutenant William Stewart of the Impress Service at Greenock and James Graham, described in the papers as ‘a negro, residing in Glasgow, who had been born into the business of a seaman’ has been uncovered as part of a cross-Atlantic project to unravel thousands of legal documents. The papers, spanning 75 years from 1759 to 1834, include litigation and testimony documents, letters, wills, business contracts, bankruptcy details and other evidence gathered by lawyers of the time in an effort to prove their cases.”

DigitalNC: New Newspaper, The Pamlico News, Now Available. “The paper was first published in the late 1960s as The Pamlico County News, but in 1977 the paper’s name was changed to The Pamlico News. The newspaper is still published under this name today. Published weekly in Bayboro, North Carolina, the paper focuses on local and broader North Carolina news including topics on community history, events and festivals, citizen accomplishments, education, and more.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

The Budapest Times: Hungary’s family photo album on better display. “The online repository of 156,000-and-growing Hungarian photos taken from 1900 to 1990 and now posted in the Fortepan digital archive has been running a weekly article in a blog named Heti Fortepan for the past year, and now an English edition has been launched under the translated title Weekly Fortepan.”

USEFUL STUFF

Popular Science: Your guide to better online security in 2022. “Here at Popular Science, we understand the struggle and have dedicated a large portion of our coverage to helping you navigate the labyrinthine portfolio of profiles and cookie crumbs you’ve scattered across the web. As a gift to you, we’ve bundled together many of our most useful stories for quick access as we roll into the new year. You may have made other resolutions for 2022, but few will protect you as much as ensuring your security practices are up to snuff.”

Mashable: How to make your Gmail account self destruct, and why you really should. “As we move through life there are few things that we truly take with us. A family heirloom, perhaps. Your loved ones, if you’re lucky. And, more and more frequently, one of those things happens to be an email account steadily filling up with personal correspondence, bills, medical records, and embarrassing moments from your past. And thanks to the modern wonder of cloud computing, that collection will likely long outlast you. Unless you set your entire Google account to self destruct after your death — which, thanks to Google’s Inactive Account Manager, you can do.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

The Lincolnite: Campaigners’ anti-nuke dump banners (and skeleton!) put on map in Google surprise. “Campaigners fighting a nuclear storage facility in Theddlethorpe have been given an unexpected boost after the latest Google Maps Streetview update included images of their banners – and even a skeleton scarecrow. The images, captured in November 2021 according to Google, include Hallowe’en Scarecrow competition victor Maggie Loy’s winning entry.”

The Guam Daily Post: Passion project preserves treasure trove of Guam history. “The Sinajana Mayors office has embarked on a mission to preserve a part of Guam’s history, after it came across a box of photographs dating back to the 1940s. The box had been passed down several times before curiosity led the Sinajana Mayor’s office to open it. Inside the box a treasure trove of Guam’s history was discovered.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

CNET: Washington state to require internet service disclosure when selling house in new year. “It’s hard to imagine home life without the internet, particularly amid the coronavirus pandemic. Now a law going into effect in Washington state is acknowledging that. Starting in the new year, home sellers in Washington will be required to share their internet provider on signed disclosure forms that include information about plumbing, insulation and structural defects.”

Yahoo News: CBP launches review of secretive division that targeted journalists, lawmakers and other Americans. “U.S. Customs and Border Protection is conducting a review of a secretive division that uses some of the country’s most sensitive databases to investigate the travel and financial records and personal connections of journalists, members of Congress and other Americans not suspected of any crime.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Wired: Crime Prediction Keeps Society Stuck in the Past . “In Discriminating Data: Correlation, Neighborhoods, and the New Politics of Recognition, digital media scholar Wendy Hui Kyong Chun argues that the most common methods used by technologies such as PredPol and Chicago’s heat list to make predictions do nothing of the sort. Rather than anticipating what might happen out of the myriad and unknowable possibilities on which the very idea of a future depends, machine learning and other AI-based methods of statistical correlation ‘restrict the future to the past.’ In other words, these systems prevent the future in order to ‘predict’ it—they ensure that the future will be just the same as the past was.”

The Conversation: Take a Closer Look: How More and More Students Are Catching the Citizen Science Bug. “Taxonomy was once the domain of white-coated scientists with years of university training. While this expertise is still important, everyday Australians are increasingly helping to identify species through citizen science apps. Rapid advances in smartphone and tablet cameras are helping to popularize this activity. Biodiversity researchers are calling on citizen scientists to contribute data to fill information gaps, identify species declines and inform management decisions. And young researchers – some as young as infant school children – are stepping up to help.”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

New York Times: 2022 Is Full of First Steps to the Moon. “Robotic missions to Mars and advances in space tourism dominated the space activities of 2021. But in 2022, the moon is likely to stand out, as companies and governments launch various moon-bound spacecraft.” good morning, Internet…

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January 3, 2022 at 06:29PM
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Sunday, January 2, 2022

Sunday CoronaBuzz, January 2, 2022: 39 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Sunday CoronaBuzz, January 2, 2022: 39 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.

CORONAVIRUS MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

PsyPost: People who believe COVID-19 misinformation are more likely to contract the virus. “Having less accurate knowledge about COVID-19 is associated with a greater likelihood of contracting the virus, according to new research published in Scientific Reports. The findings indicate that people who believe misinformation about COVID-19 are at greater risk of getting sick compared to their more knowledgeable counterparts.”

Rolling Stone: Marjorie Taylor Greene Permanently Suspended From Twitter for Pushing Covid Lies. “Twitter has permanently suspended Marjorie Taylor Greene’s personal account, @mtgreenee, for pushing Covid misinformation, a company spokesperson confirmed to Rolling Stone on Sunday.”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

Irish Examiner: Hospitals, bus services and businesses suffering due to Covid related staffing issues. “With record-high cases of Covid-19 being reported, hospitals, bus services and businesses have said they are struggling to operate due to many of their staff being out with the virus. Earlier today, Cork University Hospital (CUH) urged members of the public to explore all other options available before presenting to the Emergency Department.”

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

Albany Herald (Georgia): COVID numbers make dramatic jump at Phoebe facilities. “For those who are moved by numbers, try this one on for size: The number of COVID-19 patients being cared for in Phoebe Putney Health System hospitals has increased 161% in the last two weeks. From a few days of single-digit COVID patients at Phoebe facilities, that number jumped to 47 on Thursday, 35 at Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital in Albany, 11 at Phoebe Sumter Medical Center in Americus and one at Phoebe Worth Medical Center in Sylvester.”

New York Times: North Carolina faces a surge, but runs into testing issues.. “As the Omicron variant of the coronavirus continues to fuel a nationwide surge, North Carolina is seeing a drastic increase in Covid-19 cases. The state has reported a 166 percent increase in infections in two weeks, according to a New York Times database, and some counties are struggling to keep up with testing demands.”

MassLive: COVID hospitalizations pass 200-mark at Baystate Health. “COVID-19 hospitalizations at Baystate Health facilities in Western Massachusetts have passed the 200-mark for the first time since the start of the pandemic nearly two years ago.”

HEALTH CARE – CAPACITY

NBC Washington: UM Hospitals in Prince George’s Declare Emergency, Employ Crisis Standards of Care. “University of Maryland Capital Region Health says it’s moving three Prince George’s health centers to crisis standards of care amid rising COVID-19 cases and staffing shortages.UM Capital Region Medical Center, UM Bowie Health Center and the Emergency Department at UM Laurel Medical Center declared a hospital emergency Friday, according to a press release.”

EVENTS / CANCELLATIONS

Wired: Yup, CES Is Happening. Here’s What to Expect. “EVER SINCE THE onset of the Covid-19 pandemic in early 2020, fresh irony has been injected into the “What to Expect” genre of journalism. What to expect from a massive trade show? Who knows! Who knows if it will even happen! But this one is happening—at least for now. This is the big one: CES, the giant annual consumer electronics fest in Las Vegas, Nevada. And it’s happening both IRL and online.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

NBC News: This bus won’t get you out of Hong Kong, but it might get you to sleep. “Almost two years into the coronavirus pandemic, Charles and Jenny Chung long for a getaway from their home in Hong Kong. But with overseas travel stymied by the Chinese territory’s strict quarantine requirements, the couple found a different way to relax and recharge: five hours on a public bus. The ‘Bus Sleeping Tour,’ organized by local company Ulu Travel, is billed as the longest bus route in Hong Kong at 83 kilometers (51 miles).”

BBC: US flight cancellations hit new holiday peak amid Covid and bad weather. “Flight cancellations in the US have hit a new peak in a Christmas season hit hard by the Covid pandemic and bad weather. Nearly 4,400 flights around the world were cancelled on Saturday, more than 2,500 of them in the US, air traffic site FlightAware reported.”

New York Times: A Nation on Hold Wants to Speak With a Manager. “The meanness of the public has forced many public-facing industries to rethink what used to be an article of faith: that the customer is always right. If employees are now having to take on many unexpected roles — therapist, cop, conflict-resolution negotiator — then workplace managers are acting as security guards and bouncers to protect their employees.”

CNN: Goldman Sachs tells employees to stay home due to Covid. “Goldman Sachs is joining a growing list of Wall Street firms advising employees to stay home due to soaring Covid cases. The bank sent a memo Sunday encouraging employees who can work remotely to do so until January 18, a Goldman Sachs spokesperson told CNN.”

UNITED STATES / UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

Asahi Shimbun : New COVID-19 cases hit single-day tally at U.S. bases. “Prefectural authorities here announced a single-day record of 235 new COVID-19 cases among U.S. forces in Okinawa Prefecture on Jan. 1, adding that U.S. military officials were still trying to grasp how the explosive outbreak had taken hold.”

New York Times: Child Tax Credit’s Extra Help Ends, Just as Covid Surges Anew. “For millions of American families with children, the 15th of the month took on a special significance in 2021: It was the day they received their monthly child benefit, part of the Biden administration’s response to the pandemic…. Now, the benefit — an expansion of the existing child tax credit — is ending, just as the latest wave of coronavirus cases is keeping people home from work and threatening to set off a new round of furloughs. Economists warn that the one-two punch of expiring aid and rising cases could put a chill on the once red-hot economic recovery and cause severe hardship for millions of families already living close to the poverty line.”

Associated Press: Fauci: CDC mulling COVID test requirement for asymptomatic. “As the COVID-19 omicron variant surges across the United States, top federal health officials are looking to add a negative test along with its five-day isolation restrictions for asymptomatic Americans who catch the coronavirus, the White House’s top medical adviser said Sunday.”

WORLD/COUNTRY GOVERNMENT

AFP: Coronavirus: Europe has recorded more than 100 million Covid-19 cases since start of pandemic. “Europe has recorded more than 100 million coronavirus cases, more than a third of all infections worldwide, since the start of the pandemic, an Agence France-Presse tally showed on Saturday. The continent has once again become the pandemic’s epicentre in recent months, and is battling an upsurge of cases spurred on by the highly transmissible Omicron strain of the virus.”

ANI: China: Xi’an authorities vow supply to daily necessities amid COVID-19 lockdown. “The authorities of Xi’an city of China have pledged to ensure the supply of daily necessities as the lockdown in the city entered its tenth day. So far, seven patients in the recent Covid-19 epidemic resurgence in Xi’an have been treated, cured and transferred to Xi’an Qinhuang Hospital for ongoing health monitoring, Global Times reported.”

Inquirer (Philippines): 3-day work suspension at SC ordered due to COVID-19. “There will be a three-day work suspension in the Supreme Court after a number of court personnel tested positive for COVID-19 after taking an antigen test last Dec. 27, 2021.”

BBC: Covid: Workplaces told to plan for absences of up to 25%. “Ministers have been tasked with developing ‘robust contingency plans’ for workplace absences, as the government warned rising cases could see up to a quarter of staff off work. Public sector leaders have been asked to prepare for ‘worst case scenarios’ of 10%, 20% and 25% absence rates, the Cabinet Office said.”

Thaiger: Thailand’s come a long way battling Covid-19 since September. “to celebrate the new year, The Thaiger looks back at the Covid-19 data over the last 4 months of 2021 from September 1 to January 1 to see that, while we’re not out of the woods yet, Thailand has certainly come a long way since the middle of 2021 when Covid-19 rampaged through the country, sending death rates soaring and governments scrambling to lock down the country and contain the virus.”

STATE GOVERNMENT

NWI Times: Indiana General Assembly convenes Tuesday amid COVID-19 surge. “Despite surging COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, and deaths across the Hoosier State, the Republican-led House and Senate are doing away with the face mask mandate, plexiglass barriers, and social distancing that last year kept the Legislature’s annual meeting from becoming a superspreader event.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

Kitsap Sun: Kitsap family flees Colorado wildfires, COVID-19: ‘We’re just happy our family is safe’. “A family reunion for the holidays was first cut short when Sarah [Dubitzky]’s husband, Nick, came down with COVID-19. Days later, the family had to evacuate their quarantine rental as the Marshall and the Middle Fork fires raged through the Boulder suburbs of Superior and Louisville, destroying around 1,000 homes. The destruction included their family’s holiday rental, and many of their belongings and Christmas presents. ”

Cleveland: ‘Vaccine Queen’ who helped so many during coronavirus pandemic faces similar hurdle for treatment after testing positive. ” The frustration over the coronavirus that gripped Stacey Bene nearly two years ago returned Saturday. She and Marla Zwinggi became widely known as the ‘Vaccine Queens’ for their help in getting more than 2,300 Northeast Ohio residents access to vaccines at the most dangerous stages of the virus. Her push stemmed from her frustration in the online barriers that hindered many older residents’ attempts to become vaccinated. She felt a similar angst Saturday.”

SPORTS

Bucs Nation: Buccaneers head coach Bruce Arians to coach Week 17 after COVID-19 positive test. “The Tampa Bay Buccaneers today announced that Head Coach Bruce Arians has tested positive for COVID-19 and is currently isolating at home.” He will be coaching Sunday.

Inside the Games: Professional boxing in Britain suspended in January amid record high COVID-19 cases. “All professional boxing bouts in Britain have been suspended in January as the country battles with record levels of COVID-19 cases. The British Boxing Board of Control (BBBofC) has confirmed the suspension amid surging coronavirus figures caused by the more contagious Omicron variant.”

K-12 EDUCATION

Associated Press: Atlanta schools to go virtual for a week due to COVID spike. ” Another one of Georgia’s largest school districts has decided to start 2022 classes virtually because of high numbers of COVID-19 cases. Atlanta Public Schools announced students will be virtual when classes start back after winter break on Tuesday.”

NJ: N.J.’s largest school district will switch to remote learning as COVID fears rise. “Newark, the state’s largest school district, has joined the growing list of districts switching to remote learning next week due to rising COVID-19 cases statewide. The district, which has about 40,000 students, will move to virtual learning from Jan. 3 to Jan. 14., officials said.”

BBC: Covid: Pupils to wear face masks in class to tackle Omicron. “Face masks are to be worn in secondary classrooms in England’s schools to reduce the spread of the Omicron variant, the government has announced. The temporary reintroduction of face coverings aims to address concerns about schools remaining open for face-to-face learning this coming term. Meanwhile, six school staff unions have issued a demand for urgent action to limit the spread of the virus.”

Associated Press: Judge blocks COVID vaccine mandate for Head Start program. “A Louisiana federal judge has ruled that President Joe Biden cannot require teachers in the Head Start early education program to be vaccinated against COVID-19. The decision hands a victory to 24 states that had sued the federal government. U.S. District Judge Terry Doughty wrote Saturday that the Biden administration unlawfully bypassed Congress when ordering that workers in Head Start programs be vaccinated by Jan. 31.”

K-12 EDUCATION – FLORIDA

Orlando Sentinel: Orange schools encouraging masks amid COVID spread; Lake announces campus vaccine sites. “Orange County Public Schools is encouraging employees and students to wear face masks ahead of the return to class following a winter break that saw record-setting numbers of COVID-19 cases as the omicron variant continues to spread.”

Miami Herald: Archdiocese of Miami changes mask requirements for its schools after COVID-19 case rise. “When students and staff in schools run by the Archdiocese of Miami return to classes Monday, they’ll be required to wear masks, the Catholic organization announced Saturday. And that requirement will be in place ‘regardless of vaccination status or parental request to waive the requirement’ for students 2 years old and up.”

RESEARCH

2 Minute Medicine: Immune dysfunction is associated with a higher risk of breakthrough COVID-19 infection. ” This retrospective cohort study found that patients with immune dysfunction experienced a reduction in COVID-19 infection incidence after full vaccination.”

NBC News: Covid is rampant among deer, research shows. “The research suggests the coronavirus could be taking hold in a free-ranging species that numbers about 30 million in the United States. No cases of Covid spread from deer to human have been reported, but it’s possible, scientists say. It’s a reminder that human health is intertwined with that of animals and inattention to other species could prolong the pandemic and complicate the quest to control Covid.”

Nexstar Media Wire: ‘Long COVID’ sufferers may have heart damage if battling shortness of breath a year later. “People with ‘long COVID’ may have suffered heart damage if they are still struggling to breathe during exercise a year on, researchers warn. Medical scans show patients who experience breathlessness a year after leaving hospital are more likely to experience cardiovascular problems, even if they never have before.”

OUTBREAKS

Los Angeles Times: Younger adults driving coronavirus surge in Southern California. “Southern California entered 2022 in the midst of a rapid upswing in coronavirus cases from the Omicron variant, with adults ages 18 to 49 transmitting the virus at a high rate and officials urging the public to curtail holiday weekend gatherings to help slow the surge.”

NBC News: Wastewater samples reveal record levels of Covid-19 across U.S.. “With at-home Covid-19 tests in high demand and their efficacy in question, health departments from California to Massachusetts are turning to sewage samples to get a better idea of how much the coronavirus is spreading through communities and what might be in store for health care systems. Experts say wastewater holds the key to better understanding the public health of cities and neighborhoods, especially in underserved areas that do not have equal access to care.”

New York Times: Puerto Rico Faces Staggering Covid Case Explosion. “Rafael Irizarry, a Harvard University statistician who keeps a dashboard of Puerto Rico Covid-19 data, tweeted the daunting facts: A third of all coronavirus cases the island has recorded since the start of the pandemic occurred in the past month. The number of cases per 100,000 residents jumped to 225, from three, in three weeks. In December, the number of hospitalizations doubled — twice.”

CRIME / SECURITY / LEGAL

STV News: Covid test centre ‘deliberately’ set on fire on New Year’s Day. “An investigation has been launched after a Covid test centre was ‘deliberately’ set on fire on New Year’s Day. Police were made aware of the incident around 12.40am on January 1 after fire crews attended the blaze on Risk Street in Dumbarton. The fire was extinguished and no-one was injured.”

OPINION

Washington Post: Opinion: The Supreme Court must uphold Biden’s vaccine mandates — and fast. “President Biden’s emergency covid-19 mandates have faced an avalanche of legal challenges. Two of those mandates — the Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s rule that businesses with 100 or more employees must require workers to be fully vaccinated or regularly tested and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ regulation requiring vaccinations for staff at health-care facilities — will soon face scrutiny from the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court needs to uphold the president’s mandates without delay. Not doing so would be an affront to public health and the law.”

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January 3, 2022 at 12:09AM
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UK Politics, Massachusetts Postcards, North Carolina Newspapers, More: Sunday ResearchBuzz, January 2, 2022

UK Politics, Massachusetts Postcards, North Carolina Newspapers, More: Sunday ResearchBuzz, January 2, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

National Archives (UK): Prime Minister’s files from 1998 – 2000 released. “Today we release files from the Prime Minister’s Office and Cabinet Office covering the first years of Tony Blair’s premiership. The newly released Cabinet Office files (CAB and PREM) shed light on a range of subjects both at home and abroad under Blair’s leadership.”

The Enterprise Falmouth: Falmouth Public Library Unveils New Digital Collection. “Two years after receiving a grant to digitally preserve Falmouth’s history, the Falmouth Public Library is ready to unveil its new digital collection—Postcards From Falmouth: The Oral Histories. The project is an ongoing effort to curate a series of oral histories based on the library’s extensive collection of historical postcards. Kim DeWall, head of technical services at FPL, was the grant manager for this project, which began in 2019 after the library was awarded funds through the Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners under the Library Services Technology Act.”

DigitalNC: The Wallace Enterprise now on DigitalNC Thanks to New Partner Thelma Dingus Bryant Library. “Thanks to our new partner, the Thelma Dingus Bryant Library in Wallace, NC (Duplin County), twenty years of the local paper The Wallace Enterprise is now online. Over 1,000 issues covering 1931 to 1955 were digitized from microfilm. The paper covers many local topics of the day in Duplin County and wider eastern North Carolina and had the tagline ‘Devoted to the Best Interests of the People of Wallace and Duplin County.'”

USEFUL STUFF

MakeUseOf: 5 Google Chrome Tab and Bookmark Hacks to Make Your Life Easier. “The invention of the browser tab and bookmark functions has increased people’s online productivity. Instead of having multiple windows open, you can instead have multiple tabs in one window. This feature can help you organize your workflow, allowing you to open a group of web apps or specific topics in their own windows. But what if you want to organize things further, like subgrouping similar web apps or systematically bookmarking open tabs?”

CogDogBlog: A CC Only Google Images Bookmarklet By Request. “Hmmm, someone pressed the 3 button. This is an outflow of the recent hand tossed post about my hackly idea for making Google Image search server only Creative Commons licensed results…. @ResearchBuzz tossed in the request line. I have to give Tara a listen as I have been pilgering links and resources from her site since the beginning of web time.” It always weirds me out when I guest star in my own newsletter.

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Saint Louis University: Boeing Institute of International Business Launches Podcast. “The podcast explores key issues in international business today with critical thought leaders from around the world. A new guest host each will take the reins each month from the Boeing Institute’s Advisory Board of business executives and discuss topics ranging from post-Brexit Europe to COVID market recovery, geo-economic strategies, the green deal and much more with leading global experts in international business.” Six episodes are available now.

Wired: In Celebration of the Internet’s True Angels. “THE INTERNET IS made up of givers and takers. The vast majority of users appear to be the latter: They click through instruction videos on how to fix broken toilets, pore over reviews before investing in air purifiers, and are delighted to find that someone has uploaded a clip of their favorite old children’s TV show. The givers are the ones who make all of this possible: They film themselves fixing toilets, write 1,000-word reviews of air purifiers, and digitize their VHS tapes before sharing the results with the world. Without the givers, the internet would not be anywhere near as helpful or useful a place—without the givers, many toilets would still be broken.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Hyperallergic: Artists Say Plagiarized NFTs Are Plaguing Their Community. “Non-fungible tokens (NFTs) have opened up previously unimaginable possibilities for many artists, allowing them to create or “mint” unique artworks and reach a global collector base at the click of a button. But the growing popularity of these digital assets, whose authenticity and proof of ownership are ostensibly secured by their existence on the blockchain, has been accompanied by a rise in reports of so-called ‘NFT theft’ — artists having their work plagiarized, minted as an NFT, and even sold to buyers who believe they are acquiring the real deal.”

Bleeping Computer: Microsoft Exchange year 2022 bug in FIP-FS breaks email delivery. “Microsoft Exchange on-premise servers cannot deliver email starting on January 1st, 2022, due to a ‘Year 2022’ bug in the FIP-FS anti-malware scanning engine. Starting with Exchange Server 2013, Microsoft enabled the FIP-FS anti-spam and anti-malware scanning engine by default to protect users from malicious email.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Chrome Unboxed: More Improvements That Google Play Books Should Make To Its Web App This Year. “I can no longer use my Duet with the Google Play Books app, and instead, I’ve been forced into using the web app in its place. In doing so, I’ve realized just how truly awful the PWA experience is. With all of the advancements and hype around progressive web apps, you’d think that the company would throw some paint on something as important as Books, and maybe even do a few things under the hood. Today, I’d like to take a moment to look at how the service has done over the last 365 days and offer five more major thoughts about how the company can bring Play Books out of the Stone Age.”

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory: LLNL establishes AI Innovation Incubator to advance artificial intelligence for applied science. “Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) has established the AI Innovation Incubator (AI3), a collaborative hub aimed at uniting experts in artificial intelligence (AI) from LLNL, industry and academia to advance AI for large-scale scientific and commercial applications.”

Forward: My wife gave me a DNA test kit for Hanukkah. The family secrets it revealed changed my life. “My journey started in 2017 when my wife gave me a mail-in DNA test as a Hanukkah gift. I completed the test but only glanced at the results. After all, I thought I knew everything I needed to know about my family. What else could I learn from my DNA? Three years later, with a wealth of time on my hands during the pandemic lockdown of 2020, I decided to take a closer look at my DNA test results: 100% Ashkenazi Jewish. No surprise there. But when I examined the names of the people I shared significant amounts of DNA with, I didn’t recognize any of them.” Good morning, Internet…

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January 2, 2022 at 06:36PM
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Saturday, January 1, 2022

Saturday CoronaBuzz, January 1, 2022: 73 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Saturday CoronaBuzz, January 1, 2022: 73 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.
By ResearchBuzz

I’m testing some new workflows to get more articles indexed. They’re working. Please get a booster shot. Please wear a mask when you’re inside with a bunch of people. Much love.

UPDATES

Washington Post: ‘Crazy’ omicron surge could peak soon, but the virus is unpredictable as the pandemic enters its third year. “The idea of a rapid peak and swift decline has a precedent in South Africa, the country that revealed the presence of omicron in late November. Cases there spiked quickly and then dropped with unexpected speed after only a modest rise in hospitalizations. An especially transmissible virus tends to run out of human fuel — the susceptible portion of the population — quickly. Some forecasts suggest coronavirus infections could peak by mid-January.”

CORONAVIRUS MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

CNN: House GOP committee deletes tweet spreading disinformation about Covid-19 booster shots. “The false tweet from the House Judiciary Committee Republicans’ official account, which was posted Thursday afternoon, read: ‘If the booster shots work, why don’t they work?’ The tweet received a wave of backlash before it was taken down and came at a time when Covid cases are spiking across the US following the Omicron variant’s emergence, and public health experts are encouraging people to get boosted to protect themselves and others.”

The Guardian: I’ve been lied about and others get death threats. Covid has shown the power of misinformation. “One of the most unpredictable aspects of the past two years, and one of the most disheartening, has been the rise of widespread misinformation. The line between facts and lies has disintegrated. Years of experience in infectious disease control and a doctorate or medical degree quickly became equivalent to the influencer on YouTube or Facebook who has garnered hundreds of thousands of followers by promoting exciting-but-untrue ‘facts’.”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

CNN: The Covid-19 case surge is altering daily life across the US. Things will likely get worse, experts warn. “The US is ringing in the new year amid a Covid-19 surge that experts warn is exploding at unprecedented speed and could alter daily life for many Americans during the first month of 2022.”

Associated Press: In nation at war with itself, one town tries cup of civility. “That’s the warring America. It plays out in Washington, in decidedly uncivil town meetings across the country and over the airwaves. It infects social media, where people, by their own admission, lose their minds. There’s another, quieter, America, too. It asks about the family. It commiserates about the water bill and shoots the breeze. It’s a place where people who can be Facebook-nasty are face-to-face polite. Often it meets over coffee.”

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

Salon: As omicron explodes in New York, hospitals aren’t seeing a corresponding rise in patients. “In New York, COVID-19 is spreading across at a faster rate than at any other point during the pandemic, including during the deadly first wave in spring 2020. More than 110,000 people have tested positive just since Christmas Day in New York City, according to the New York Times. However, unlike previous surges, hospitalizations have not climbed as fast as positive cases. That might seem like good news on paper — and may suggest that the pandemic is on to a less deadly phase.”

HEALTH CARE – CAPACITY

KOLD: Oro Valley Hospital temporarily suspends admission of cardiac arrest patients. “Oro Valley Hospital is temporarily not accepting cardiac arrest patients due to staffing issues. Those experiencing a heart attack or chest pain will have to be taken to other area hospitals.”

WJHL: Ballad Health COVID-19 hospitalizations highest since October 7. “Ballad Health reported Friday that its COVID-19 hospitalization numbers are nearing those seen during the Delta surge. Friday’s COVID-19 hospitalizations at Ballad facilities stand at 270 — marking the highest since Oct. 7.”

EVENTS / CANCELLATIONS

Deadline: CES Shortened By One Day Amid Covid Case Records Across The U.S.. “The Consumer Technology Association announced late today that its CES trade show next week in Las Vegas will end one day early. The move comes amid record-setting Covid counts in many states across America.”

INSTITUTIONS

Patch Virginia: Librarians To The Rescue: Scheduling Vaccines, Providing Tests. “In many jurisdictions, libraries shuttered their doors at the onset of the pandemic. Since March 2020, libraries have adjusted and employees have operated COVID-19 call centers, provided at-home test kits, provided free mobile Wi-Fi hotspots, and offered curbside pick-up for traditional library services like book distribution.”

Art Newspaper: Museums plan for a busy year despite Covid-19 uncertainty. “Will 2022 see a return to normal for exhibition schedules? Or will surging cases mean plans have to be torn up again? We asked museum directors and head curators how confident they are for the year ahead.”

Associated Press: New Year’s Rose Parade proceeds despite COVID-19 surge. ” A year after New Year’s Day passed without a Rose Parade due to the coronavirus pandemic, the floral spectacle celebrating the arrival of 2022 proceeded Saturday despite a new surge of infections due to the omicron variant. The 133rd edition of the Pasadena, California, tradition featured actor LeVar Burton as grand marshal, 20 marching bands, 18 equestrian units and dozens of floats reflecting the theme of ‘Dream. Believe. Achieve.'”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

CNN: Stocks surged in 2021, as Wall Street rolled its eyes at Covid. “The Dow fell about 65 points in late morning trading Friday, or 0.2%. It is up 19% this year. The Nasdaq was down 0.3% Friday and has gained 22% in 2021 while the S&P 500, which fell 0.2%, is up more than 27% this year. It’s the third straight year of gains for all three major indexes, which are each not far from record highs. In fact, the S&P 500 has closed at an all-time high 70 times this year.”

Hawaii News Now: Hawaiian Airlines cancels dozens of flights amid COVID staffing shortages. “As the highly transmissible Omicron variant infects workers and causes staffing shortages across the country, Hawaiian Airlines is also feeling the impact, already canceling dozens of flights. The airline said a total of 11 flights were canceled on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day combined, and 10 interisland flights were canceled on Wednesday.”

New York Times: Want a Covid Test With Your Viagra?. “A health care company known for selling hair loss and erectile dysfunction treatments diversifies its product line, and earns new fans along the way.”

CBS Miami: Walmart Temporarily Closes Miami Store For COVID Cleaning. “Walmart has temporarily closed a store in Miami. The chain said their store, at 3200 NW 79th St., would close Saturday starting at 2 p.m. as part of a company-initiated program to allow thoroughly clean and sanitize the building. They said the store would be closed through Sunday and would reopen Monday at 6 a.m.”

Associated Press: Cruise Ship Carrying Over 4,000 Passengers Held in Lisbon Amid Covid-19 Outbreak. “A cruise ship carrying over 4,000 people has been held in the Portuguese capital of Lisbon after a COVID-19 outbreak infected crew members, the German news agency dpa reported Saturday.”

CBS 17: Raleigh restaurants impacted by worker shortages, again, due to COVID-19, some as much as 50 percent. “Long wait times, customer notices and workers calling out sick because of COVID-19 exposure. ‘Normally, we would see about 500-600 guests on a Saturday morning,’ Abby Dearlove said, the manager of Tupelo Honey Cafe. But not on this New Year’s Day.”

Business Insider: United and Spirit Airlines announce temporary pay bumps for pilots and flight attendants in effort to alleviate labor shortages. “After a chaotic holiday travel week plagued by mass cancellations and delays, some airlines are turning to temporary salary bumps in an effort to incentivize workers and alleviate labor shortages. United Airlines and Spirit Airlines both announced pay increases for select staffers on Friday, which include tripling pay for United pilots who take extra flights through January 29 and doubling pay for Spirit flight attendants for shifts through January 4.”

UNITED STATES / UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

CNN: FAA warns it may be forced to delay flights because of Covid. “The Federal Aviation Administration is warning more air travel headaches may be in store, even as airlines cancel thousands of flights because of coronavirus crew shortages and other issues. The FAA said Friday an ‘increased number’ of its own employees are testing positive for the virus. That could force it to implement health and cleaning procedures that reduce the number of flights the system can handle.”

Business Insider: The US Postal Service is getting hit by Omicron after it survived the holiday season by enlisting tens of thousands of workers. “The American Postal Workers Union said in December 2020 that 19,000 of the Postal Service’s 644,000 workers were sick or in isolation due to the coronavirus. Now, as the Omicron variant spreads throughout the US, Postal Service workers are once again getting sick, the union told the Associated Press’ David Sharp on Friday. Roughly 6,500 postal workers were quarantined due to COVID-19 as of Christmas Eve.”

WORLD/COUNTRY GOVERNMENT

Sky News: New Year’s Eve around the world: How countries celebrated with widespread COVID restrictions. “New Year’s Eve plans have largely been muted or cancelled for the second straight year due to a surge in coronavirus infections – this time driven by the highly contagious Omicron variant. However, many nations made the best of it and went ahead with extravagant fireworks displays and celebrations. Here’s a snapshot from around the world.”

BBC: Covid-19: WHO chief optimistic disease will be beaten in 2022 . “The World Health Organization (WHO) chief says he is optimistic that the coronavirus pandemic will be defeated in 2022, provided countries work together to contain its spread. Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu warned against ‘narrow nationalism and vaccine hoarding’ in a new year statement.”

Reuters: Italy reports record 144,243 coronavirus cases, 155 deaths. “Italy reported a record 144,243 COVID-19 related cases on Friday, following 126,888 the day before, the health ministry said, while the number of deaths fell slightly to 155 from 156.”

Reuters: Cyprus COVID-19 cases hit record on Omicron. ” Cyprus registered a record high 5,048 new cases of COVID-19 on Friday in a surge largely blamed on the Omicron variant spreading throughout Europe. The island reported 3,851 new cases on Thursday, up from fewer than 2,000 cases at the start of the week.”

CGTN Africa: Uganda eases COVID-19 restrictions including re-opening of schools and bars. “In a televised speech late on Friday, Uganda President Yoweri Museveni said pre-primary, primary, and secondary schools would be reopened on January 10. The East African nation had imposed some of Africa’s toughest restrictions. In September, some measures were eased, including allowing the resumption of education for universities and other post-secondary institutions.”

NationNews: Bahamas announces new measures for rising COVID cases. “The Bahamas government has outlined a series of new measures aimed at curbing the spread of the Omicron variant of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic that the authorities here said is causing a fourth surge in the country. Health and Wellness Minister, Dr Michael Darville said that among the new measures include the hiring of additional medical personnel; sourcing of new COVID-19 drugs; acquisition of Grosvenor Close Nursing Building for an Infectious Diseases and entering into a partnership with private sector labs.”

BBC: Covid: Next few days crucial as admissions rise, says health boss. “The next few days are “crucial” for the NHS as Covid hospital admissions rise across England, a health boss has said. Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers, which represents health trusts, said staff were working ‘flat out’ and under ‘arguably more pressure’ than this time last year.”

BBC: Covid: UAE bans foreign travel for citizens without booster jab. “The United Arab Emirates has announced that it will ban citizens who have not had three doses of a vaccine against Covid-19 from travelling abroad. Officials said the exit ban, which comes into force on 10 January, would not apply to those who are medically exempt from receiving the vaccine.”

Haartez: New COVID Cases in Israel Triple Within Days, Infection Rate Hits Six-month High. “Coronavirus cases in Israel have tripled over the past week, from 1,806 on Sunday – the highest figure since mid-October – to 5,466 new cases confirmed on Friday.”

Al Jazeera: French burn fewer cars on New Year’s Eve due to pandemic. “Hundreds of empty, parked cars go up in flames in France each New Year’s Eve, set afire by young revellers, a much-lamented tradition that appeared in decline this year, which saw only 874 vehicles burned. The number of cars burned overnight has declined compared with New Year’s Eve in 2019 when 1,316 vehicles went up in flames, Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin tweeted on Saturday.”

STATE GOVERNMENT

NBC DFW: Gov. Abbott Asks Biden for Help With COVID Testing, Antibody Treatments, Hospital Staff. “Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) is asking the Biden Administration for help managing the ongoing COVID-19 crisis in Texas after the state health department says they’ve run out of an antibody treatment proven to be the most effective against the omicron variant.”

WHDH: Mass. jury trials paused until Jan. 31 due to increase in COVID-19 cases. “The Supreme Judicial Court ordered all jury trials in Massachusetts paused on Friday due to an increase in COVID-19 cases.”

NBC New York: Hochul Extends Mask Mandate, Debuts New Surge Plan as NY Smashes All-Time Case Record Again. “On the final day of 2021, the country’s first calendar year completely engulfed by the COVID-19 pandemic, New York delivered one last record-smashing COVID case high for a third straight day. The governor’s final update for the year included a record 76,555 new positives as the omicron surge stretches the state’s hospitals further. In her final address of 2021, Gov. Kathy Hochul detailed a revamped winter surge plan with five keys targets to aid overwhelmed hospitals and protect the most vulnerable.”

WPSD: Medical leaders question decision to end state of emergency. “A medical group representing most hospitals in the St. Louis region says it is disappointed in Missouri Gov. Mike Parson’s decision allowing a state of emergency to expire, saying it removes flexibility that helped hospitals treat the onslaught of COVID-19 patients.”

CBS Philly: Delaware Issues State Of Emergency As COVID Cases, Hospitalizations Hit Record Highs. “Delaware has issued a state of emergency to help alleviate the strain on crowded hospitals as COVID cases continue to surge. It takes effect Monday. One hundred National Guard troops will be deployed to assist health care workers.”

Chattanooga Times Free Press: Tennessee ending daily COVID-19 data reports in 2022 as omicron drives record case surge. “Starting in the new year, the Tennessee Department of Health will stop reporting COVID-19 data on a daily basis and move to weekly updates instead at a time when the omicron variant is fueling a record-breaking surge in new cases across the state. Tennessee Health Commissioner Dr. Lisa Piercey announced the changes during a news briefing on Dec. 22, and department of health spokesperson Bill Christian confirmed in an email Thursday the state will move ahead with its plan.”

Associated Press: Arkansas Prisons Lockdown Amid Record Covid Case Count. ” Arkansas prisons are being locked down for at least two weeks because of the rising number of COVID-19 cases among staff and prisoners. The Arkansas Department of Corrections announced Friday that prisons are prohibiting visits and ‘limiting non-essential movement within and between facilities’ until Jan. 14.”

KOCO: Federal grant funds COVID-19 vaccine program for homebound Oklahomans. “The vaccine is being issued to the most vulnerable and unable to get the shot on their own. The partnership between the Oklahoma Department of Human Services, the State Department of Health and Native American tribes in our state is helping with vaccine access. Until August, homebound individuals had no pathway to get a COVID-19 vaccine. Now, the most compromised can get vaccinated from the safety of their home.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

WPVI: Philadelphia’s new COVID-19 vaccination requirement for indoor dining begins Monday. “Beginning Monday, January 3, as part of a phased rollout, patrons will have to show proof of a COVID-19 vaccine to eat inside a restaurant or food establishment in Philadelphia. Philadelphia Health Commissioner Dr. Cheryl Bettigole said the mandate is meant to help prevent another shutdown of indoor dining.”

EssexLive: Essex Covid: Chelmsford City Council cancels three days’ worth of food waste collections due to staff shortages. “Food waste collections in an Essex city have been cancelled for three days due to a staff shortage caused by Covid-19 sickness and isolation. Chelmsford City Council has said it did not wish to cancel the green food waste bin collections from December 29 to 31 (Wednesday to today), but it was left with no other choice. 23 members of staff are currently off work due to Covid illness and isolation.”

NBC Bay Area: San Francisco Fire Chief Tests Positive for COVID-19. “The San Francisco Fire Department Chief, Jeanine Nicholson, tested positive for COVID-19. Nicholson got the positive result Monday, the department said, adding that her symptoms have been mild so far and she’s working from home.”

Associated Press: Louisville halts yard waste collection due to COVID. “Louisville Metro Public Works is suspending yard waste collection after COVID-19 infections caused a drastic staffing shortage. The department announced the change this week. The suspension starts on Monday and will go on ‘until further notice,’ the department said in a statement.”

Wired: The Pandemic Might Have Redesigned Cities Forever. “IT WAS EASY to find tragedy in the second year of the Covid-19 pandemic. Vaccines became widely available and proved to be remarkably effective at keeping people out of hospitals, but some people wouldn’t get their shots—mostly Republicans. Broader uptake of vaccines could have averted 163,000 deaths between June and November alone. That’s tragedy. But you could find hope in 2021, too. It was literally in the air. The virus—and specifically the understanding that as an aerosol it spread more easily in poorly ventilated spaces—changed something fundamental about urban life.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

WJHL: Gray man returns home after 120-day battle with COVID-19. “As many gear up to celebrate the new year, one Gray family is celebrating a homecoming. Jackson Randall was hospitalized with COVID-19 on Sept. 2. He told News Channel 11 it feels good to be home.”

Associated Press: Leader of Washington’s Catholic Archdiocese has COVID-19. “The cardinal who leads the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Washington has tested positive for the coronavirus. The archdiocese said in a statement Friday that Cardinal Wilton Gregory is canceling his appearances at this weekend’s services.”

Uproxx: Omarion Has Heard All The Omicron Jokes But Says You Don’t Need ‘A Negative Test’ To Dance To His Music. “The arrival of the omicron COVID-19 variant is the reason why many musicians are canceling their events and performances all across the country. But when the coronavirus strain first broke out in the US, R&B fans flocked to Twitter to decide that dubbing the new variant the Omarion variant was a much catchier term. After a wave of memes, the ‘Touch’ singer has finally addressed the jokes and assured fans they don’t need to ‘have a negative test result’ in order to dance to his music.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS – CELEBRITIES/FAMOUS

CNN: Rep. Ayanna Pressley tests positive for Covid-19. “‘After experiencing Covid-like symptoms, this morning I received a positive, breakthrough Covid-19 test result,’ Pressley said in a statement. ‘Thankfully, my symptoms are relatively mild, and I am grateful to be fully vaccinated and boosted. I am currently isolating and following all health protocols in order to mitigate further spread and keep my loved ones and community safe.'”

INDIVIDUALS – DEATHS

Crooks & Liars: Anti-vax Mom Who Said ‘COVID Is Not Your Enemy, Fear Is’ Dies From COVID. “Bridget Jackson, from Port Huron, had frequently promoted her anti-mask, anti-vaccine stance on Facebook, sharing memes and posts including one in which she said she ‘understands the risk’ of the disease but ‘doesn’t prioritize fear over life.'”

Newsweek: Economist Robin Fransman, a Prominent Coronavirus Vaccine Skeptic, Has Died From COVID. “Robin Fransman, a political economist, passed away due to the consequences of infection with the SARS-CoV-2, the virus which causes COVID-19, on December 28 at a hospital in Amsterdam, Dutch daily newspaper Het Parool reported.”

K-12 EDUCATION

Associated Press: Georgia schools going virtual due to COVID spike. “One of Georgia’s largest school districts will start the second semester virtually amid the state’s surge in COVID cases. Clayton County Public Schools south of Atlanta said Thursday students will learn remotely from Jan. 5 through Jan. 7 and then return to school on Jan. 10. Superintendent Morcease Beasley said the additional time away from the classroom will allow students and employees who test positive for the virus to complete recommended quarantine periods.”

Click on Detroit: Detroit public schools cancel classes Monday-Wednesday to configure COVID plan. “The Detroit Public Schools Community District (DPSCD) has canceled all classes on Monday, Jan. 3 through Wednesday, Jan. 5 in an effort to test all employees for COVID-19 before students return to school. The announcement comes as Detroit, along with the rest of the state of Michigan, sees a surge in virus cases, likely partly driven by the new omicron variant.”

CP 24: Ontario to stop collecting COVID-19 numbers from school boards, suspend reporting of cases in schools. “The Ontario government will stop collecting COVID-19 numbers from school boards and suspend reporting of new coronavirus infections among students and staff starting next week. The change was detailed in a memo from the Ministry of Education sent to school board officials on Thursday, the same day the province announced that it was delaying the opening of schools for two days – from Jan. 3 to Jan. 5.”

WIVB: Western New York schools to distribute free COVID test kits, Lancaster announces distribution plan. “Erie 1 BOCES is scheduled to receive COVID-19 test kits Saturday evening. Several schools in the area have announced distribution plans for the kits. Maryvale announced its plan via Twitter Saturday morning. Saturday afternoon, Lancaster also announced a distribution plan for Sunday, as local schools try to have as many students as possible tested for the virus prior to returning to the classroom in an effort to maintain in-person instruction.”

Bronx Times: NY cancels January Regents exams as COVID cases surge. “New York students won’t take Regents exams this January. New York education Commissioner Betty Rosa canceled the winter tests on Tuesday, citing a ‘daunting’ spike in coronavirus cases across the state. No decisions have been made yet regarding the June and August exams, which far more students take. Officials previously said they planned to move forward with spring testing.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

News 5 Cleveland: Case Western Reserve University turning Delta Gamma sorority house into COVID-19 isolation space. ” Members of the Delta Gamma sorority at Case Western Reserve University are being relocated so the school can create an ‘isolation space’ to help prevent the spread of COVID-19. The school said it selected the sorority house to use after reviewing occupancy rates for university-owned fraternity and sorority residences.”

WAFB: LSU requires masks indoors for spring semester; other COVID protocols announced. “Our student vaccination rate of over 84 percent represents the best in the state for public universities and is among the highest vaccination percentages in the SEC. Consequently, our positivity rate in the fall was extremely low and we were able to successfully complete our semester. In consultation with our faculty Health and Medical Advisory Committee, and looking carefully at the nationwide surge of the Omicron variant, we are building on our successful approach from the fall and providing you with our protocols for the spring 2022 semester.”

HEALTH

WBNS: ‘Decoupling’: The COVID-19 trend doctors hope to see in 2022. “Over 2020 and 2021, we’ve seen the pattern of waves. When cases increase, we see the number of hospitalizations go up as well. Unfortunately, when there’s an increase in hospitalizations, the number of deaths has gone up. Eventually the waves peak, crest, and the numbers decrease again. With omicron, we are going to see more cases. However, as more people get vaccines and boosters, will that be enough to ease the hospitalizations and deaths?”

TECHNOLOGY / INTERNET

FOSS Force: Will Anyone Actually Show Up at CES on Wednesday?. “I’ve wondered how Omicron and the current spike in new cases would affect this year’s show, but I didn’t bother to look into it. CES is generally off my radar (I’m mainly interested in conferences that focus on open source software), although my inbox at this time of year is filled with invites from PR folks looking to set up interviews with the press at the event.”

Washington Post: As omicron washes over America, much of the country still isn’t using exposure notification apps. “The highly anticipated tool has failed to fully live up to its promise of slowing the virus′s spread, just as a burdened public health system is in sore need of new techniques. The seven-day average of new daily cases on Tuesday afternoon hit 253,245, the highest since the beginning of the pandemic. Traditional contact-tracing systems, requiring human workers to individually call potentially infected people, have been overwhelmed. People who test positive with at-home tests, which are becoming more popular as people avoid massive lines outside government and private testing centers, still can’t upload their results to the system in most of the states that use it.”

BBC: NHS Covid app sends record number of ‘pings’ . “The NHS Covid app has sent a record number of contact-tracing alerts, informing people of their exposure to someone who has tested positive for the virus. A total of 698,646 ‘pings’ were sent to people in England and Wales between 16 December and 22 December. That is nearly 8,000 more than the previous record of 690,711 sent during a seven-day period in July.”

RESEARCH

BBC: Covid booster 88% effective against hospital treatment with Omicron. “A booster vaccine is 88% effective at preventing people ending up in hospital with Covid-19, new data from the UK Health Security Agency suggests. The new data confirms that two doses of the AstraZeneca, Pfizer or Moderna vaccines offers little protection against being infected with Omicron.”

New York Times: Studies Suggest Why Omicron Is Less Severe: It Spares the Lungs. “In studies on mice and hamsters, Omicron produced less damaging infections, often limited largely to the upper airway: the nose, throat and windpipe. The variant did much less harm to the lungs, where previous variants would often cause scarring and serious breathing difficulty.”

Newswise: COVID-19 Can Trigger Self-Attacking Antibodies. “Infection with the virus that causes COVID-19 can trigger an immune response that lasts well beyond the initial infection and recovery—even among people who had mild symptoms or no symptoms at all, according to Cedars-Sinai investigators. The findings are published in the Journal of Translational Medicine.”

OUTBREAKS

WRAL: For a 2nd day, NC reports highest single-day coronavirus case increase ever. “On Friday, North Carolina reported another all-time high of daily new COVID-19 cases, 19,174. That’s 3% higher than the record 18,571 cases reported Thursday. The state’s rate of positive cases also reached an all-time high of 22.9% on Friday, meaning almost 23% of all coronavirus tests in North Carolina are coming back positive.”

NBC Miami: Florida Continues Record-Shattering Week, Reports 75,962 New Covid Cases. “The 75,962 new cases reported by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention once again set a daily record for Florida and brought the state’s total to 4,165,962 since the pandemic began in March of 2020.”

Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Georgia sees another near-record day in COVID-19 cases amid omicron’s spread. “The Georgia Department of Public Health (DPH) on Friday reported 24,320 confirmed and probable coronavirus infections, the second-highest total of the pandemic. A day ago, Georgia reported more than 25,000 cases, nearly double the worst day Georgia reported before omicron. Thursday was the third day in a row of record-breaking daily infections, following reports of 13,670 cases Tuesday and 19,894 on Wednesday.”

Deadline: Los Angeles Records Highest Number Of New, Daily Covid Cases Ever; Count Nearly Doubles In 48 Hours Amid “Explosive” Transmission. “Los Angeles reported the highest number of new, daily Covid cases since the pandemic began on Friday. The previous record was set almost exactly one year ago, during the peak of the winter surge. On January 4, the county saw 21,849 new infections, according to its data dashboard. Today, the 24-hour count rose to 27,091, a new record and up about 35% from the 20,198 infections yesterday.”

Washington Post: D.C. had one of the lowest rates of coronavirus cases in the country. That has changed.. “In both Maryland and Virginia, the worst of the omicron wave is in the D.C. suburbs. Virginia is reporting record infection rates across the state, but the steepest increase is playing out in Northern Virginia as well as the state’s Northwest health district, which spans the Shenandoah Valley, including Charlottesville. The current wave seems to be spreading from north to south, following the initially high numbers in Maryland and D.C. into Virginia, state epidemiologist Lilian Peake said.”

EuroWeekly: Antarctica outbreak: Fully vaccinated staff catch Covid in one of the most remote places in the world. “DESPITE having to follow strict safety measures; being fully vaccinated, passing multiple PCR tests and quarantining before entering its Polar Station, two-thirds of the 25 staff based at Belgium’s Princess Elisabeth in Antarctica – one of the most remote places in the world – have caught Covid after an almost impossible outbreak.”

CRIME / SECURITY / LEGAL

Arizona Public Radio: Arizona court upholds decision to not release COVID records. “An Arizona appellate court has upheld a lower court’s decision to deny a request for medical records related to COVID-19. J.D. Ball of Scottsdale represented himself in the case initially filed in Maricopa County Superior Court in 2020 against the Arizona Department of Health Services.”

AFP: Coronavirus: Dutch police raid rave party in breach of Covid-19 rules. “Dutch police on Saturday broke up a rave in breach of Covid-19 rules that was attended by hundreds in a disused factory, local media reported. Dozens of police officers entered the makeshift venue in the central town of Rijswijk with hundreds more officers mobilised to shepherd people away, NOS television said. Several partygoers were arrested but there was no violence, according to local broadcaster Omroep Gelderland.”

OPINION

Ars Technica: TV Technica 2021: Our favorite shows and binges helped us combat pandemic fatigue. “Fortunately, while there were indeed some hiccups, we still had plenty of fantastic television on hand to take our minds off the grim daily reality, ranging from established franchises and quirky newcomers to imaginative adaptations and several foreign offerings that proved to be surprise breakout hits. With apologies to the many great series we just didn’t have room for on this year’s list, here are our favorite TV watches and binges for 2021, in no particular order.”

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January 2, 2022 at 12:42AM
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Affordable Connectivity Program, Public Domain 2022, Digital Privacy, More: Saturday ResearchBuzz, January 1, 2022

Affordable Connectivity Program, Public Domain 2022, Digital Privacy, More: Saturday ResearchBuzz, January 1, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

Wishing you peace, health, joy, and contentment in 2022. Much love.

NEW RESOURCES

The Verge: A program for cheaper internet for low-income Americans launches today. “Households can apply to take up to $30 a month off their internet service bill. For households on qualifying Tribal lands, the discount is up to $75 per month. The program could help to connect millions of people to the internet who haven’t had access to it at home, especially in communities that have historically faced more barriers to getting online.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

The Verge: Winnie-the-Pooh and around 400,000 early sound recordings enter public domain. “A. A. Milne’s Winnie-the-Pooh, Ernest Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises, and other books, movies, and compositions from 1926 enter into the public domain today in the US. The works are now ‘free for all to copy, share, and build upon,’ according to Duke’s Center for the Study of the Public Domain, which tracks which copyrighted materials will become public each year.”

CNET: Remove all your personal info from the internet: 6 steps to disappear for good. “Unfortunately, you can never completely remove yourself from the internet, but there are ways to minimize your digital footprint, which would lower the chances of your personal data being out there. Be forewarned, however: Removing your information from the internet, as I’ve outlined below, could adversely affect your ability to communicate with potential employers. Still interested? Here are some ways to disappear your digital self.”

USEFUL STUFF

Wired: How to Rescue Your Photos From an Old Computer. “I recently told my cousin about a candid photo of our parents awkwardly caught mid-action, standing in front of my Christmas tree, unaware their photo was being taken. Once I described it, my cousin wanted to see it, and so did I— I realized it had been years since I’d laid eyes on it. I had assumed it was in one of the dozen photo albums in my living room, but I soon realized this photo, along with hundreds of others from my daughter’s childhood, was on one of my two retired laptops. I’m willing to bet you have memories like this too, photos stashed away on old hard drives, or a laptop you haven’t used in years that’s collecting dust in the back of your closet.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Engadget: The tech industry’s accessibility report card for 2021 . “There are too many individual transgressions and improvements to exhaustively detail here. Due to their sheer size, though, tech’s largest companies wield the greatest influence over what the rest of the industry does. By holding them accountable, we have a better chance of seeing widespread change in the way tech thinks about inclusive design. Here’s how Apple, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Meta (formerly Facebook) and more did to improve the accessibility of their products and services in 2021.”

Mashable: 33 years to read ‘Twilight’? This TikTok account isn’t in a hurry.. “One-line-at-a-time accounts like [Shaiann] Alger’s use a pretty simple format. Pick a book, movie, or TV show, make an account on your favorite social media platform (usually Twitter or, now, TikTok), and start tweeting a single line, sentence, or quote at a similar time each day. Some accounts go chronologically through a screenplay or book, but others mix it up. Schedule the tweets to go up each day and boom! Instant community.”

Denver Gazette: Social media groups coordinate to save animals endangered by Marshall fire. “As the Marshall fire grew, the Facebook posts flew. ‘For the small/growing fire on Middle Fork Road, please let me know if you need to coordinate horse evacuation. Currently it is 40 acres or so,’ someone posted on social media just before 11:30 a.m. Thursday. A short time later, the ‘Horse Evacuation Boulder Fort Collins Fire’ Facebook page became a life raft for farmers, ranchers and helpers.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Techdirt: Missouri Governor Still Expects Journalists To Be Prosecuted For Showing How His Admin Leaked Teacher Social Security Numbers. “Missouri Governor Mike Parson is nothing if not consistent in his desire to stifle free speech. As you’ll recall, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch discovered that the state’s Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (DESE) website was programming in such an incompetent fashion that it would reveal, to anyone who knew where to look, the social security numbers of every teacher and administrator in the system (including those no longer employed there).”

KnowTechie: LastPass says your passwords are totally safe and no one’s account was compromised. “LastPass really wants you to know that the company didn’t leak any of your passwords. Earlier this week, users reported that the company notified them that their master passwords might have been compromised. But now, the company says an ‘error’ may have caused the alerts to be sent out.”

NJ: Number of women nominated to N.J. state boards climbs as lawmakers vote to create first-of-its-kind database. “The number of women nominated to serve on state boards, commissions and authorities inched higher this year as Gov. Phil Murphy’s administration and lawmakers responded to criticism that New Jersey’s vast array of boards is too white and male…. The increases come as the state Legislature approved a bill last week that will require Rutgers University to create and maintain a first-of-its-kind database listing every person appointed to a state board, commission or authority and survey them to track their race and gender.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

PsyPost: An analysis of Twitter posts suggests that people with depression show increased rumination on social media overnight. “People with depression show distinct patterns of online activity, according to a study published in Scientific Reports. Twitter users who said they had a diagnosis of depression were more active on Twitter in the evening, less active in the early morning, and ruminated more on Twitter from midnight to around 6 a.m.”

Washington Post: In 2021, tech talked up ‘the metaverse.’ One problem: It doesn’t exist.. “The metaverse doesn’t exist yet, and it probably won’t anytime soon. What does exist is an idea, an explosion of hype, and a bevy of rival apps and platforms looking to capitalize on both — without a clear path between the idea and reality. In techland, 2021 wasn’t the year of the metaverse. It was the year of rebranding existing technologies as building blocks for the metaverse, while leaving intact the corporate walls that make a true metaverse impossible.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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January 1, 2022 at 11:58PM
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