Saturday, March 5, 2022

Holocaust Education Colorado, Ireland Vital Records, NARA, More: Saturday ResearchBuzz, March 5, 2022

Holocaust Education Colorado, Ireland Vital Records, NARA, More: Saturday ResearchBuzz, March 5, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

CBS 4 Denver: New Website From University Of Denver Supports Holocaust Education In Colorado Schools. “In 2020, Gov. Jared Polis signed a law that requires Holocaust and Genocide education in Colorado schools. Now there’s a new website from the University of Denver that’s supporting teachers with their lesson plans.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Irish Central: Irish Government extends online database of birth, death, and marriage records. “…the Birth Register now includes the years 1864 to 1921, while the Marriage Register has been updated to include records from the years 1845-1946. The Death Register, meanwhile, now includes the years 1864 until 1971. The website is free and users do not require any subscription to access the records.”

The Guardian: National Archives turns over Trump White House logs to January 6 panel. “The US National Archives has delivered White House visitor logs from Donald Trump’s administration to the congressional committee investigating the January 6 insurrection at the US Capitol by extremist supporters of the then president, the committee said on Friday. The National Archives also turned over records from former vice-president Mike Pence, meeting a 3 March deadline.”

USEFUL STUFF

Make Tech Easier: 21 of the Best FaceTime Tips and Tricks to Use it Like a Pro. “FaceTime is Apple’s propriety audio and video calling service. You can use it for one-on-one or group calling. It offers filters, stickers, screen sharing, and much more. Whether you are new to FaceTime or have been using it for a while, the following FaceTime tips and tricks will help you make the most out of it.”

Stanford News: Seven tips for spotting disinformation related to the Russia-Ukraine conflict. “[Shelby] Grossman and her team are closely monitoring the narratives emerging on social media related to the crisis, including online propaganda from the Kremlin. A report of their initial findings published just two days before Russia launched a large-scale invasion of Ukraine. Grossman said that while they aren’t necessarily seeing new disinformation tactics, what’s new is how the tactics are being applied.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

St. Pete Rising: The world’s largest collection of artist sketchbooks is moving to St. Pete. “After spending over a decade in Brooklyn, the world’s largest collection of artist sketchbooks is moving to St. Pete. The Sketchbook Project will be located inside The Factory, a new creative arts destination in St. Pete’s Warehouse Arts District, at 2622 Fairfield Avenue South, Building 8A.”

BBC: Ukraine war: The TikToker spreading viral videos. “Marta [Vasyuta] speaks fluent Ukrainian, Russian and English. As soon as she heard about the invasion, she began to scroll though Ukrainian channels on the Telegram messaging app. Telegram is hugely popular in Ukraine. People in Ukraine were uploading videos on to these channels. Marta trawled through and began to save them.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Mashable: Sketchy domains try to trick Ukraine supporters out of would-be donations . “Scammers and other bad actors are once again up to their old tricks in search of ill-gotten profits, and this time they’ve set their sights on Ukraine. In order to take advantage of the ongoing war in the country, they’re using an old, reliable tool to trick internet users: Domain names.”

CNET: FTC Takes Action Against WW for Collecting Children’s Health Data. “The US Federal Trade Commission is requiring WW International — the company previously known as Weight Watchers — and its Kurbo App to permanently delete data it collected through a weight loss app used by kids as young as eight. Children’s personal health data was collected without the permission of parents or guardians, the FTC said in a complaint filed against the company in February in the District Court in the Northern District of California.”

Brookings Institution: How is Russia conducting cyber and information warfare in Ukraine?. “While the Russian assault on Ukraine advances through ground and air forces, there haven’t yet been significant cyberattacks on Ukraine’s infrastructure, intelligence, or communications systems. Brookings Fellow Jessica Brandt explains what we have seen so far in the way of cyber and information warfare, why Putin might have initially avoided larger-scale cyberattacks against Ukraine, and how technology companies and U.S. and NATO intelligence services have pushed back against the Kremlin’s disinformation campaigns.” Podcast with full transcript.

RESEARCH & OPINION

VentureBeat: PolyCoder is an open source AI code-generator that researchers claim trumps Codex. “…while research labs like OpenAI and Alphabet-backed DeepMind have developed powerful code-generating AI, many of the most capable systems aren’t available in open source. For example, the training data for OpenAI’s Codex, which powers GitHub’s Copilot feature, hasn’t been made publicly available, preventing researchers from fine-tuning the AI model or studying aspects of it such as interpretability. To remedy this, researchers at Carnegie Mellon University — Frank Xu, Uri Alon, Graham Neubig, and Vincent Hellendoorn — developed PolyCoder, a model based on OpenAI’s GPT-2 language model that was trained on a database of 249GB of code across 12 programming languages.”

Politico: I Joined Truth Social. Why Do I Feel Like the Only One?. “The site is the marquee offering of Trump’s tech venture, Trump Media & Technology Group, founded last year as part of a SPAC deal, with $1 billion from undisclosed investors, according to the company (which is now reportedly under investigation by federal regulators). Truth Social’s page is filled with memes: a car veering off the highway, away from a sign for ‘Big Tech’ to an exit ramp for ‘Truth Social’; two doors, one for Twitter, showing a vacant room, another for “Truth Social,” with dozens of people trying to get in. But from the inside, Truth Social feels empty.” Good morning, Internet…

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March 5, 2022 at 10:28PM
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Friday, March 4, 2022

Friday CoronaBuzz, March 4, 2022: 38 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Friday CoronaBuzz, March 4, 2022: 38 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.
By ResearchBuzz

Please get a booster shot. Please wear a mask if you’re in a red zone. Much love.

CORONAVIRUS MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

The Hill: Surgeon general demands data on COVID-19 misinformation from major tech firms. “U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy has reportedly asked Big Tech companies to hand over data regarding COVID-19 misinformation, The New York Times reported on Thursday. In a formal notice, Murthy requested major tech platforms submit information about the prevalence and scale of COVID-19 misinformation on their sites, from social networks, search engines, crowdsourced platforms, e-commerce platforms and instant messaging systems.”

The Guardian: ‘Bot holiday’: Covid disinformation down as social media pivot to Ukraine. “Russia’s information war with western nations seems to be pivoting to new fronts, from vaccines to geopolitics. And while social media has proven a powerful tool for Ukraine – with images of Zelenskiy striding through the streets of Kyiv and tractors pulling abandoned Russian tanks – growing campaigns of misinformation around the world could change the conflict’s narrative, and the ways the world reacts.”

FTC: Cure COVID with an herbal beverage? A falsi-tea, says the FTC. “Two years into the pandemic and you thought you’d seen it all? How about an herbal tea that claims to cure COVID in 24-48 hours? It’s a representation the FTC says is steeped in deception. So we’ve joined forces with the FDA and the Department of Justice to file suit in federal court to challenge – among other things – allegedly false and deceptive claims that Earth Tea cures COVID-19 and that the defendants have clinical proof to back up their promises.”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

ABC News: Over 5 million children around the world lost a parent or caregiver to COVID-19. “Approximately 5.2 million children have lost a parent or caregiver during the pandemic, according to a new study published in The Lancet medical journal Thursday. An analysis by the same team of researchers in July 2021 had estimated 1.5 million children were orphaned during the first 14-months of the pandemic, meaning they lost at least one parent. But with new variants and a rising death count, the researchers said they felt compelled to re-evaluate the analysis.”

WGN: Pandemic causes dip in birth rate, mental health crisis among pregnant, post-partum women. “COVID-19 has had an impact on pregnant and postpartum women during the pandemic. The Illinois Department of Public Health has been tracking the number of women testing positive for COVID-19 at delivery. The latest data shows from March 2020 to March 2021, there were nearly 1,500 positive cases.”

ACTIVISM / PROTESTS

The Guardian: Fires and clashes break out at New Zealand parliament as police move in to clear protest. “Fires burned across parliament grounds, and violent clashes broke out between protesters and police at an anti-vaccine mandate demonstration on New Zealand’s parliament grounds, in extraordinary and chaotic scenes rarely seen in the country.”

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

CNN: Demand for Covid-19 testing is falling, but experts caution it’s as important as ever. “As the United States emerges from the Omicron wave, Covid-19 testing has slowed to a fraction of what it was at the beginning of the year. In mid-January, as daily case counts reached their peak, about 2.5 million tests were processed each day in the United States. Now, there are about 670,000 tests coming through each day, according to data from the US Department of Health and Human Services.”

Tampa Bay Times: Florida health equity experts reflect on progress, setbacks two years into COVID. “The pandemic forced widespread acknowledgement of systemic racism in health care. Now, the people working to address health disparities fight to keep momentum as the pandemic fades.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

WIRED: How to Move Your Shop or Business Online. “Below are a few stories of businesses that took the pandemic by the horns and created change overnight. One business previously had refused for years to offer online services. Today, that same business generates 20 percent of its revenue from virtual services. Never say never.”

Bloomberg: Google Tells Employees to Return to Offices Starting in April. “Alphabet Inc.’s Google is asking employees in the San Francisco Bay Area to work in their offices three days a week starting in April, marking its first return to campuses since the pandemic began.”

The Verge: Twitter’s CEO says employees can return to the office starting March 15th. “Twitter will be fully re-opening its offices and bringing back business travel starting on March 15th, according to a post written by CEO Parag Agrawal. In his note (see the full text below), Agrawal reiterates the policy put into place by former Twitter lead Jack Dorsey, saying that employees will be allowed to work remotely full-time if that’s what they’re comfortable with.”

WORLD GOVERNMENT / NON-US GOVERNMENT

BBC: How Taiwan used simple tech to help contain Covid-19. “G0v, pronounced ‘gov zero’: a largely anonymous collective of tech workers – designers, programmers, activists – has been key in originating ideas. The collective is best known for bi-monthly hackathons and ‘forking’ – a concept taken from programing, where existing open source software is redesigned into a new product.”

The Mainichi: Over 70% of homeless people in Tokyo unvaccinated for COVID: survey. “More than 70% of homeless people in Japan’s capital who responded to a survey had not been vaccinated for COVID-19, a support group revealed on Feb. 24. The group, informally called Nojiren, works for needy people primarily in Tokyo’s Shibuya Ward.”

New York Times: Queen Elizabeth Resumes Work 9 Days After Positive Coronavirus Test. “Queen Elizabeth II is returning to work after a Covid scare, Buckingham Palace said on Tuesday, ending more than a week of heightened concern about the health of Britain’s longest-reigning monarch after it was announced that she had tested positive for the coronavirus.”

The Guardian: Mandatory Covid jabs dropped for NHS staff in England from mid-March. “Mandatory Covid-19 jabs for health and social care workers in England will be scrapped on 15 March, Sajid Javid has said, as he confirmed staff will no longer be required by law to get vaccinated. The rules came into force for care home staff in November, and had been due to be introduced for frontline NHS and wider social care staff in regulated settings from 1 April.”

New York Times: ‘I Don’t Dare Get the Shot’: Virus Ravages Unvaccinated Older Hong Kongers. ” For two years, Hong Kong had largely avoided a major coronavirus outbreak with tight border controls and strict social distancing measures. Then Omicron triggered an explosion of infections, exposing the city’s failure to prepare its older — and most at risk — residents for the worst. In a matter of weeks, the outbreak quickly overwhelmed Hong Kong’s world-class medical system.”

UNITED STATES / UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

New York Times: Covid, inflation and a loss of aid crimped American incomes in January.. “January was also the first month since mid-2021 in which parents did not receive payments under the expanded child tax credit, which expired at the end of last year. Income from government programs fell 1.3 percent last month. Yet despite the crimp in incomes, Americans continued to spend. Consumer spending rose 2.1 percent in January. Even after adjusting for inflation, spending was up 1.5 percent.”

CNN: White House unveils plan to move America to a new stage of the Covid pandemic. “The National Covid-19 Preparedness Plan, which will require additional funding from Congress, is focused on spending on treatments for Covid-19, preparing for new variants, keeping schools and businesses open and continuing the effort to vaccinate the nation and the world.

Washington Post: Kaine introduces bill to research and combat long covid. “Sen. Tim Kaine got covid-19 in the spring of 2020, and nearly two years later he still has mild symptoms. ‘I tell people it feels like all my nerves have had like five cups of coffee,’ Kaine said Wednesday of his ’24/7′ tingling sensation, just after introducing legislation intended to expand understanding of long covid.”

STATES / STATE GOVERNMENT

New York Times: New York State ends its mask mandate for schools.. “New York will no longer require students and educators to wear masks in schools starting Wednesday, Gov. Kathy Hochul announced on Sunday, a milestone in the state’s two-year struggle against the coronavirus pandemic and a mostly welcome sign of the virus’s retreat.”

USA Today: Hawaii is ditching strict entry requirements: No more COVID tests, vaccine proof or quarantine. “Hawaii is lifting its strict COVID-19 entry requirements on March 26, Gov. David Ige announced Tuesday. Travelers will no longer need to show proof of a COVID-19 vaccine or a negative COVID-19 test to bypass a mandatory quarantine. The five-day quarantine, which has applied to those who don’t show vaccine proof or a negative test, is going away, too. The state is keeping its indoor mask mandate, however.”

NJ: N.J.’s COVID public health emergency to end Monday, Murphy says. “Gov. Phil Murphy will lift the latest COVID-19 public health emergency on Monday after two years of New Jerseyans being under emergency orders from the pandemic that swept the world.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

Associated Press: New York City mayor plans to lift indoor vaccine mandate. “New York City Mayor Eric Adams announced Sunday that a dramatic drop in coronavirus infections could lead to the lifting of vaccine mandates on restaurants, bars and theaters as soon as March 7.”

San Francisco Chronicle: Mayor Breed wants office workers to return to S.F., but not everyone is on board. “Despite indoor mask rules being lifted this month, office workers are not rushing back to their high rises downtown, and that has huge implications for businesses small and large. It’s also a big concern for the city’s long term tax revenue, some of which has been offset by remote workers no longer commuting into the city.”

Washington Post: Cities are ditching vaccine mandates to dine out and watch shows. Did they work?. “Public health officials say these rules delivered on the promise of creating safer environments and nudging at least some people to get vaccinated. Some cities, including Chicago and Philadelphia, say they are prepared to bring back vaccine mandates to combat surges. But they are wary of locking thousands out of public life in perpetuity.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

The Guardian: ‘I last went to school in December’: a headteacher’s battle with long Covid. “As the headteacher of a primary school in a small town in Lincolnshire, [Steve] Bladon, 46, knows as much as anyone about living with the virus. He has led his team and school community tirelessly through the pandemic, delivering remote education and food parcels, reassuring anxious parents and keeping colleagues calm. It’s been exhausting but rewarding, and he’s proud of what his school has achieved. Now, however, he’s one of as many as 1.3 million people in the UK learning to live with long Covid – that’s an altogether different challenge.”

K-12 EDUCATION

Chalkbeat New York: 52% of NYC public school students are fully vaccinated. Check your school’s rate here.. “In total, 59% of the city’s public school students have received at least one vaccine dose and nearly 52% are considered fully vaccinated. The information is required under City Council law, and includes a breakdown of school-level vaccination rates and the number of students who have consented to in-school COVID testing. Updates will be shared every two weeks. The figures don’t include charter schools.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

TNR: UC eliminating all masking restrictions beginning March 12. “Last week, the University of Cincinnati (UC) announced that it would immediately cease mandatory weekly testing for unvaccinated students, faculty and staff. Now, UC has announced it is changing its masking policies to align with recommendations made by the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).”

HEALTH

BBC: Vaccines: What we know about long-term safety now. “This week marks the anniversary of the first delivery of Covid-19 vaccines under the Covax scheme – as well as being more than 14 months since the first dose was given. And scientists explain that’s enough time for all but the rarest side effects to have emerged.”

The Atlantic: Now Is as Good a Time as There’ll Ever Be to Leave Your Pandemic Bubble. “People who are older or immunocompromised have had to be more cautious than others throughout the pandemic. Now is no exception, but still, experts think that, depending on people’s personal circumstances and comfort levels, many in these groups could sometimes go out (if they wear a good mask) and socialize (if others get tested). They also think that families with kids who aren’t old enough to be vaccinated can do some fun things too.”

RESEARCH

Nature: Wuhan market was epicentre of pandemic’s start, studies suggest. “Scientists have released three studies that reveal intriguing new clues about how the COVID-19 pandemic started. Two of the reports trace the outbreak back to a massive market that sold live animals, among other goods, in Wuhan, China1,2, and a third suggests that the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 spilled over from animals — possibly those sold at the market — into humans at least twice in November or December 20193. All three are preprints, and so have not been published in a peer-reviewed journal.”

PsyPost: New research shows masks make it more difficult to read emotions from faces. “Masks impair the recognition of six basic facial expressions, according to new research published in the journal Social Psychology. The findings suggests that visual information from lower portions of the face play an important role in understanding facial expressions.”

CBC: Canadian researchers discover 1st possible case of deer spreading COVID-19 virus to a human. “In a world first, preliminary research suggests deer may be able to transmit the COVID-19 virus to humans, following analysis by a team of Canadian scientists monitoring the spread of SARS-CoV-2 in animals. Up until now, researchers have only found evidence of humans spreading the virus to deer, and deer spreading it to other deer.”

Washington Post: 140 million Americans have had coronavirus, according to blood tests analyzed by CDC. “More than 140 million Americans have had the coronavirus, according to estimates from blood tests that reveal antibodies from infection — about double the rate regularly cited by national case counts. The estimates, compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, show that about 43 percent of the country has been infected by the virus. The study shows that the majority of children have also been infected.”

UMass Chan Medical School: At-home COVID-19 antigen tests detect omicron and delta variants similarly, study finds. “At-home antigen tests performed similarly in detecting omicron and delta SARS-CoV-2 variants in comparison to polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests and remain valuable tools to inform people of their infection status quickly, according to a study authored by UMass Chan Medical School and associated researchers supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Rapid Acceleration of Diagnostics (RADx) initiative. The research appeared in medRxiv, a preprint online platform, and has not yet been peer reviewed.”

ProPublica: What’s Holding Up the COVID Vaccines for Children Under 5?. “For months, parents have been told COVID vaccines for their little ones are coming. But opaque communication from the FDA, shifting timelines, delays and misinformation have left parents frustrated and confused. Here’s everything we know at the moment.”

PUBLIC OPINION

Associated Press; Pandemic fears are fading along with omicron: AP-NORC poll. “Just 24% say they are ‘extremely’ or ‘very’ worried about themselves or a family member contracting COVID-19, down from 36% in both December and January, when omicron caused a massive spike in infections and taxed public health systems. Another 34% say they are somewhat worried. More than 140,000 deaths in the U.S. have been attributed to COVID-19 since omicron became the dominant strain of the coronavirus in mid-December.”

Reuters: Most EU women blame COVID pandemic for spike in gender violence -poll. ” Nearly three out of four European Union women think the COVID-19 pandemic has spurred an increase in physical and psychological violence against them, according to a Eurobarometer poll published on Friday. The poll, commissioned by the European Parliament ahead of Women’s Day on March 8, shows 77% of women in the EU think the pandemic caused a rise in gender violence in their countries, with nine in 10 respondents in Greece and Portugal saying so.”

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March 5, 2022 at 04:36AM
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Ukraine Take Shelter, Living Languages, Zillow, More: Friday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, March 4, 2022

Ukraine Take Shelter, Living Languages, Zillow, More: Friday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, March 4, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Geek Wire: Seattle teen builds new website to aid Ukrainian refugees, two years after COVID-19 site took off . “More than two years after starting a website to track the most current data related to the worldwide spread of the coronavirus, the 19-year-old from the Seattle area is turning his attention to the conflict raging in Ukraine. [Avi] Schiffmann has launched a new website called Ukraine Take Shelter, with the goal of helping scores of refugees impacted by the week-old Russian invasion find potential safe spaces to stay in neighboring countries and elsewhere.”

University of Massachusetts Amherst: UMass Hosts First Open Access, Multilingual Journal Dedicated To Revitalization Of Endangered And Minoritized Languages. “The goal of the journal is to promote scholarly work and experience-sharing by bringing together language revitalization practitioners from a diversity of backgrounds, whether academic or not, within a peer-reviewed publication that is not limited to academic contributions and is inclusive of a diversity of perspectives and forms of expression. Living Languages seeks to publish contributions on practical and theoretical issues directly related to actions that support language sustainability and/or revitalization in indigenous and minoritized contexts.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

PR Newswire: Zillow’s new side-by-side comparison tool helps home shoppers make faster, smarter decisions to find a home they love (PRESS RELEASE). “Now available on the Zillow mobile app and website, Homes to Compare gives buyers the ability to select as many as five homes and view the properties’ details on a comprehensive side-by-side chart. On one screen, users can compare more than 70 key listing details, such as price, square footage, lot size, property conditions, architectural style, interior features and more.”

CNN: Russia’s answer to Google warns it may not be able to pay its debts. “Yandex (YNDX), which handles about 60% of internet search traffic in Russia and operates a big ride-hailing business, said Thursday that it may be unable to pay its debts as a consequence of the financial market meltdown triggered by the West’s unprecedented sanctions.”

USEFUL STUFF

Duke University Libraries: Resources on the Russian Invasion of Ukraine. “As Duke University’s Librarian for Russian, Eurasian, and East European Studies, it is my professional responsibility to help patrons identify, locate, and access the scholarly resources that they need to study and teach about this region of the world. As a native of Odesa (Ukraine), the grandson of Holocaust survivors, and a first generation American, I also feel a personal sense of responsibility for helping the citizens of my adopted homeland to appreciate the gravity of the situation and work towards the peaceful resolution of Russia’s war against Ukraine.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Washington Post: TikTok has long tried to stay out of politics. Russia’s invasion is making that harder.. “TikTok’s executives spent the early days of the invasion noticeably quiet, omitting the words Ukraine and Russia in public statements and referring to the invasion as a ‘situation.’ As other companies, such as Facebook and Google, highlighted efforts to help Ukrainians shield their accounts from Russian surveillance and cyberattacks, TikTok has publicized no such program. On Thursday, TikTok started to catch up to its American social media rivals.”

CNET: No, Ukrainians Aren’t Selling Captured Russian Tanks on eBay. “Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has prompted countless news stories, memes and videos. But not every report is true. One image circulating on social media showed what was supposedly an eBay listing selling a Russian tank captured in Ukraine, priced at $400,000 (roughly £299,740, AU$546,000). Now urban-legends site Snopes has dug into the story behind the listing and revealed that the tank photo has been on the web for more than a decade, and isn’t from any current eBay listing.”

Hartford Courant: Ireland’s Great Hunger Museum collection to move in its entirety to Fairfield. “The collection of art and artifacts that make up Ireland’s Great Hunger Museum is moving in its entirety to Fairfield, it was announced on Friday by Quinnipiac University, which closed the museum last summer. Gaelic America Club (GAC) in Fairfield will be the new home of the world’s largest collection of art and artifacts about the 1845-1852 Great Hunger, QU spokesman John Morgan said in a news release.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Threatpost: Phishing Campaign Targeted Those Aiding Ukraine Refugees. “Cyberattackers used a compromised Ukrainian military email address to phish EU government employees who’ve been involved in managing the logistics of refugees fleeing Ukraine, according to a new report.”

NPR: China erases thousands of social media accounts for vulgarity, negativity and more. “China is reshaping popular culture by taking down tens of thousand of celebrities, bloggers and influencers it deems immoral. The reasons are sometimes unclear, such as the figure not being patriotic.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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March 5, 2022 at 01:33AM
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Offshore Renewable Energy, LDS Church History Biographical Database, LiveStory, More: Friday ResearchBuzz, March 4, 2022

Offshore Renewable Energy, LDS Church History Biographical Database, LiveStory, More: Friday ResearchBuzz, March 4, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

The Crown Estate: 200 terabytes of free-to-access marine data gives UK offshore development the edge. “Since the emergence of the first operational offshore wind farms in the UK just over 20 years ago, The Crown Estate’s offshore wind customers have agreed to share data collated throughout the lifecycle of their projects, in a bid to support the future sustainable growth of the offshore renewables industry. This led to the creation of the online Marine Data Exchange (MDE) in 2013, which has grown to become the biggest database of offshore renewables survey data in the world, holding over 200 terabytes of survey data from offshore projects across England, Wales and Northern Ireland.”

Deseret News: Church History Library merges pioneer and missionary records into new biographical database. “The Church History Library has merged its Pioneer Database and Missionary Database into a single, combined research tool called the Church History Biographical Database…. The new database maintains the same information, functionality and ease of use as before but with new features and plans to add datasets in the future, said Elder Curtis, who referenced his own ancestors in demonstrating the features of the database.”

PR Newswire: MyHeritage Releases LiveStory, A Groundbreaking Feature That Automatically Creates Video Biographies, Using D-ID Pioneered AI Technology (PRESS RELEASE). “MyHeritage, the leading global service for discovering your past and empowering your future, and Creative Reality™ startup D-ID, announced today the release of LiveStory, a groundbreaking new feature that creates captivating video biographies. LiveStory automatically produces an animated video of a user’s ancestor telling their life story, weaving together photos and details of their life into a narrative that is told by a speaking portrait of the person.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

The Verge: Wikimedia says it ‘will not back down’ after Russia threatens Wikipedia block. “The Wikimedia Foundation has issued a statement supporting Russian Wikipedia volunteers after a censorship demand from internet regulators. On Tuesday, tech and communications regulator Roskomnadzor threatened to block Wikipedia over the Russian-language page covering Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, claiming it contained ‘false messages’ about war casualties and the effects of economic sanctions, among other things.”

Wall Street Journal: Russia Demands Google Block ‘False’ Ads About Ukraine War. “Russia demanded that Google stop showing online-video ads it described as ‘false political information’ about Ukraine, stepping up its efforts to block access to information about its invasion of that country that contradicts its official narrative.”

New York Times: Twitch Says It Will Bar Chronic Spreaders of Misinformation. “Twitch will target only channels that meet a handful of criteria. To fall afoul of the new policy, users must be persistently sharing harmful misinformation that has been widely debunked, the company said, adding that it had ‘selected these criteria because taken together they create the highest risk of harm, including inciting real-world harm.'”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

The Atlantic: The Ugly, Embarrassing Spectacle of ‘Milling’ Around Online. “We are all just chattering away in restless and confused excitement as we try to figure out how to think about what’s happening. We want to understand which outcomes are most likely, and whether we might be obligated to help—by giving money or vowing not to share misinformation or learning the entire history of global conflict so as to avoid saying the wrong thing. We are milling.”

How-To Geek: That Paypal Balance on Social Media Was Faked, Here’s How. “You may have seen people posting screenshots of their PayPal balances with incredible amounts reflected. While the screenshots are really of the PayPal page, the amount has been faked! These balances are used for scams, but anyone can make them.”

Reuters: Czech Group Shifts From Documenting Historical Nazi, Soviet Traumas to Aiding Ukraine’s Defence. “Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has given new purpose to a Czech group, switching its focus from documenting memories of the past under Nazi and Soviet domination to supplying flak jackets, drones and helmets to Ukrainians defending their country…. Memory of Nations has run an online database of testimonies since 2008 documenting stories of people from when Czechs and Slovaks lived under Nazi occupation during World War Two or four decades of Soviet-dominated Communist rule that ended in 1989.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

CNN: Group of attorneys general announce investigation into TikTok’s impact on young Americans. “A nationwide group of state attorneys general announced an investigation into TikTok’s impact on young Americans Tuesday, adding to the steady drumbeat of political pressure being applied to social media platforms. The probe zeroes in on TikTok’s user engagement techniques and alleged risks that the platform may pose to the mental health of children, according to announcements by the states.”

The Local Denmark: Denmark criminalises social media impersonation of others. “A large majority in the country’s parliament passed the new law on Thursday, the Ministry of Justice said in a statement. ‘It is a breach of personal boundaries and deeply unpleasant to have one’s identity misused on social media. We as a society must not accept this type of behaviour and we must give better protection to victims,’ Justice Minister Nick Hækkerup said in the statement.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Space: Your name can fly around the moon on NASA’s Artemis 1 mission. “NASA is inviting people to put their names on a flash drive that will launch on the agency’s Artemis 1 mission, which will send an uncrewed Orion capsule around the moon and back a few months from now.” Good morning, Internet…

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March 4, 2022 at 06:25PM
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Thursday, March 3, 2022

Ukraine Population Density, Hawaiʻi Climate Data Portal, Parthenon Frieze Artwork, More: Thursday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, March 3, 2022

Ukraine Population Density, Hawaiʻi Climate Data Portal, Parthenon Frieze Artwork, More: Thursday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, March 3, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Airwars: Airwars launches interactive Ukraine population density map. “Airwars has launched an interactive population density map of Ukraine, providing vital support for researchers and others seeking to understand the human impact of the war…. The data, sourced by the WorldPop initiative from different academic institutions, dates from before Russia began its invasion of Ukraine on February 24th.”

This is one of those resources that I learn about from a firmly-paywalled article, careen around looking for more details and a non-paywalled source, don’t find one, and give up with a Spotted via Google Alerts: Hawaiʻi Climate Data Portal. It’s apparently officially launching later today. From the home page: “The overarching goal of the HCDP is to provide streamlined access to high-quality reliable climate data and information for the State Of Hawai‘i. This includes the production of both near-real-time monthly rainfall and daily temperature maps and a user-friendly tool to visualize and download them. Easy access to high quality climate data, information and products through the HCDP allows researchers to focus more time on their analyses and less time on data collection and processing.”

Greek Reporter: Entirety of Parthenon Frieze Featured on New Website. “The upgraded website enables art lovers from around the world to analyze and marvel at the incredible frieze, which portrays a procession for the ancient festival called the Panathenaia. A stunning array of nearly 400 human figures, including charioteers and people on horseback, as well as hundreds of animals and countless offerings to the goddess Athena is emblazoned on the frieze.”

USEFUL STUFF

Search Engine Journal: How To Migrate A WordPress Site From One Host To Another. “The bad news first… migrating a website to a new host will always make your heart race and your palms sweat, no matter how many times you’ve done it. Good news: Migrating a WordPress site to a new host is essentially a series of steps that you can repeat each and every time. It’s practically the same for every website you migrate. This step-by-step guide to seamlessly migrate your WordPress website will make the entire process a little less stressful.”

Android Police: 9 top tips and tricks to tame your Google Photos collection. “Although unlimited storage is a thing of the past, Google Photos is still one of the best photo management apps available for Android. Its straightforward design paired with a recent Material You makeover makes it a solid choice for anyone looking to organize their library of photos and videos. However, there’s a lot more to Google Photos than meets the eye. We’ve delved into Google Photos and collected nine of the best tips & tricks so that you won’t be left out of the picture.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

BBC: Ukraine crisis: Satellite data firm asks for war images. “Firms and space agencies that collect satellite imagery are being urged to share Ukraine and Eastern Europe data. The plea comes from Ukrainian-based satellite data firm EOS Data Analytics (EOSDA). It has said that it will put data suppliers in touch with Ukraine’s deputy prime minister Mykhailo Fedorov.”

New York Daily News: Not progressive enough on records preservation: The Manhattan DA’s office, like others, is making it hard for New Yorkers to find predecessors’ work . “The Manhattan DA’s office is now a case study in how quickly a decade of still-relevant public information can disappear, and why lawmakers should mandate the retention of online material of state and local offices through searchable digital archives. Absent that, gone from efficient public access are documents related to topics as varied as the sanctions investigations; congressional testimony on cybersecurity; the comprehensive marijuana reform report that led to decriminalization in New York; documents related to the prosecution of Harvey Weinstein; and even the case against Anna Sorokin, the basis for the current Netflix series ‘Inventing Anna.'”

Ars Technica: Google Play app downloaded more than 10,000 times contained data-stealing RAT. “A malicious app downloaded from Google Play more than 10,000 times surreptitiously installed a remote access trojan that stole users’ passwords, text messages, and other confidential data, a security firm reported.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

CNET: Extinct Ice Age Animals Like the Woolly Mammoth Will Roam the Metaverse. “On a remote Arctic island, some 4,000 years ago, woolly mammoths took their last steps on Earth. Around 6,000 years prior, the final few sabre-toothed cats preyed across the Americas. And 3,000 years before that, majestic dire wolves became creatures of the past. Scientists are revving up to bring these now-extinct animals, and more, into the domain of augmented reality.”

Penn Today: Bridging Wikipedia’s gender gap, one article at a time. “A new study co-authored by Isabelle Langrock, a Ph.D. candidate at the Annenberg School for Communication, and Annenberg associate professor Sandra González-Bailón evaluates the work of two prominent feminist movements, finding that while these movements have been effective in adding a large volume of biographical content about women to Wikipedia, such content remains more difficult to find due to structural biases.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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March 4, 2022 at 01:43AM
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Northwest US Hydropower, Women Art Dealers Digital Archives, Ash Wednesday Storm of 1962, More: Thursday ResearchBuzz, March 3, 2022

Northwest US Hydropower, Women Art Dealers Digital Archives, Ash Wednesday Storm of 1962, More: Thursday ResearchBuzz, March 3, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Foundation for Water & Energy Education: New Web Site Dedicated to Making Hydropower Easily Understood. “The Foundation for Water and Energy Education (FWEE) has launched a new web site with a simple mission: give teachers, students, opinion leaders, and the public balanced, reliable information about the use of hydropower in the Northwest.” Includes educational material as well as database of hydroelectric projects throughout the northwest US.

The Art Newspaper: This digital archive brings women art dealers back into the story of Modern art. “A popular hashtag every March during Women’s History Month challenges people to name #5womenartists. But can you name five women art dealers? A new project aims to prove there are many to choose from, they just have not been mined from the margins of art history with the same vigor devoted to artists.”

WGMD: 60th Anniversary of the Storm of ’62 – New Digital Archive Available. “This week is the 60th anniversary of the Ash Wednesday Storm of 1962. Delaware Public Archives has put together a treasure trove of previously unreleased photographs. The three-day nor’easter started on Tuesday, March 5, 1962, continued to slowly grind up the Atlantic coast on Wednesday, March 6, 1962, and moved away from Delaware on Thursday, March 7, 1962. By the time that the skies cleared and the winds calmed, the damage along Delaware’s Atlantic and Delaware Bay coasts was substantial with cost estimates of $50 million (roughly $465 million today.) The storm claimed seven lives in Delaware and a total of 40 lives along the East Coast.”

NCAR: Scientists Map Underwater Topography Of More Than 1.4 Million Lakes And Reservoirs Worldwide. “Lakes and reservoirs have a profound influence on ecosystem functions, local streamflow levels, and the movement of water across landscapes. But water managers often are in the dark when it comes to subsurface topography, which affects the ecology, volume, temperature, and rate of evaporation of a waterbody, as well as inflows and outflows. Now a team of scientists has developed artificial intelligence techniques to create a publicly available dataset of the underwater topography, or bathymetry, of more than 1.4 million inland lakes and reservoirs around the world.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

New York Times: Reinvention and Nostalgia: The Project to Remake Twitter. “A decentralized Twitter could take years to emerge and might look much the same as it does today. But it could allow users to set moderation rules for their own communities and ease the pressure Twitter faces from lawmakers over how it moderates content. It might also open new revenue streams for the company.”

Business Insider India: The ex-news director of Russia’s largest search engine urged his former colleagues to quit, accusing the company of censoring Russia’s invasion into Ukraine. “Lev Gershenzon worked at Yandex in various roles for four years, according to his LinkedIn profile. He took to Facebook early Tuesday morning to warn people still working at the company — which is one of the largest search engines in Russia — that it was contributing to the censorship of the country’s invasion into Ukraine.”

BBC: Ukraine’s tech community rises to challenges of war. “With a thriving technology scene, Ukraine was fast becoming a key hub in Eastern Europe and last year recorded its first ‘decacorns’ – start-ups valued above $10bn (£7.5bn). Now, many are focused on raising funds for the army.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Associated Press: US returns billionaire’s plundered artifacts to Jordan . “American authorities have returned nine looted artifacts to Jordan that were seized from a U.S. billionaire collector as part of a landmark deal announced in December. The artifacts were among 180 items seized by the Manhattan District Attorney’s office as part of an agreement with collector Michael Steinhardt to surrender trafficked artifacts and avoid prosecution. The deal capped a four-year investigation into Steinhardt’s possession of looted antiquities.”

Reuters: Ukrainian cyber resistance group targets Russian power grid, railways. “A Ukrainian cyber guerrilla warfare group plans to launch digital sabotage attacks against critical Russian infrastructure such as railways and the electricity grid, to strike back at Moscow over its invasion, a hacker team coordinator told Reuters.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

WIRED: Google’s New Tech Can Read Your Body Language—Without Cameras . “It sounds futuristic and perhaps more than a little invasive—a computer watching your every move? But it feels less creepy once you learn that these technologies don’t have to rely on a camera to see where you are and what you’re doing. Instead, they use radar. Google’s Advanced Technology and Products division—better known as ATAP, the department behind oddball projects such as a touch-sensitive denim jacket—has spent the past year exploring how computers can use radar to understand our needs or intentions and then react to us appropriately.”

Brookings Institution: The surprising performance of Kremlin propaganda on Google News. “Over the past week, the Kremlin’s propaganda apparatus consistently returned the top search result for two key terms related to the conflict—’DPR’ and ‘LPR,’ abbreviations for the break-away regions in Ukraine’s east, the Donetsk People’s Republic and the Luhansk People’s Republic, respectively. On five of the past seven days, searches for ‘DPR’ and ‘LPR’ on Google News surfaced Russian state media as the top result. On each of the past seven days, for the same searches, Russian state media was among the top two results.”

Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy: New Citizen Lab Report: Digital Transnational Repression. “While transnational repression is not a new phenomenon, such tactics are expanding through the market growth for digital technologies and the spread of Internet-connectivity, among other factors. This digital dimension of transnational repression—which we refer to as digital transnational repression—is rapidly becoming the cornerstone of ‘everyday’ transnational repression and is a threat to the rights and freedoms of dissidents and activists living in exile.” Good morning, Internet…

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



March 3, 2022 at 06:25PM
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Wednesday, March 2, 2022

Thomas Edison Recordings, Discord, Snapchat, More: Wednesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, March 2, 2022

Thomas Edison Recordings, Discord, Snapchat, More: Wednesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, March 2, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

I know that the RBs for the last few days have been really heavy with Ukraine/Russia news. I do believe that we are at a historical intersection of social networks, intelligence access, and military conflicts, and that it’ll be important to look back later at the technology coverage.

What did we talk about first? How quickly was propaganda/disinformation stifled (if at all)? Did any platforms fail capacity? How quickly were citizens cut from Internet access? Did supportive countries assist on an Internet culture level (memes, etc)? Is OSINT a general scrum or are there organized team efforts?

I’m thinking about these things as I decide to index articles or not. If the volume gets unbearable I’ll create yet another topic-specific newsletter. As always, thanks for reading. Much love.

NEW RESOURCES

Morristown Daily Record: Thousands of original Thomas Edison recordings digitized, available for free streaming. “History’s on-demand playlist has expanded significantly with the release of 2,400 Edison sound disc recordings — some recorded by the famed inventor himself — that have been digitized for free listening by the public. The collection, which has been preserved for years at Thomas Edison National Historical Park in West Orange, features many rarities, including unissued test pressings that were recorded in New York and European cities between 1910 and 1929.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

The Verge: Discord’s new policy will ban harmful medical advice, taking aim at anti-vaxx groups. “Discord is overhauling its policies and community guidelines to tackle health misinformation, off-platform behavior, and hate speech, the company announced on Friday. It’s the first big policy update for Discord in nearly two years and is designed to target groups or individuals that participate in organized violence, spread harmful anti-vaccination material, or harass other Discord users with hate speech.”

CNET: Snapchat Joins Tech Giants in Halting Ad Sales in Russia. “Snapchat has followed suit after Facebook, Twitter and YouTube began pausing ads on Friday, saying it has now stopped all advertising running in Russia, Ukraine and Belarus following the Russian invasion of Ukraine.”

Mashable: Reddit has quarantined r/Russia due to misinformation. “Reddit has quarantined subreddit r/Russia due to misinformation, as the internationally condemned Russian invasion of Ukraine continues into its sixth day. r/RussiaPolitics has also been quarantined, just days after it was created in order to host invasion-related discussions.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Washington Post: How Ukrainians have used social media to humiliate the Russians and rally the world. “A flood of real-time videos across Facebook, Telegram, TikTok and Twitter has blunted Kremlin propaganda and rallied the world to Ukraine’s side as it fights to defend its democracy from a military behemoth. It has also potentially saved lives: Ukrainians have raced to disseminate defensive strategies, plot escape routes and document the brutality of a raging clash. Some expect that the phone footage recorded in recent days could play a critical role in investigating war crimes after the combat ends.”

San Francisco Chronicle: It started with a viral TikTok video of steak and mashed potatoes. Now, this Black “trailblazer” has nearly 2 million followers. “Five months ago, one of his videos might have gotten a few thousand views. Now Emmanuel [Duverneau] is one of TikTok’s Black Trailblazers, a group of ‘trendsetting’ Black creators that the app has spent February highlighting. Such is the life of a freshly minted TikTok star in the year 2022.”

Rolling Stone: China’s Propaganda Machine Gears Up for Putin — and Blames America for the Invasion. “So far, the Chinese Communist Party’s propaganda has stopped short of fully supporting Russia in the bloody conflict in Ukraine, experts say. Rather, the overarching point of this campaign is to depict China as a rational, sober world power, and the United States and the West as a reckless, violent, and imperialistic forces that threaten global peace.”

Slate: How the Russian Invasion of Ukraine Is Playing Out on English, Ukrainian, and Russian Wikipedia. “With deadly explosions in Ukraine’s capital city of Kyiv and a developing refugee crisis, it might seem odd to cover the play-by-play of a digital encyclopedia. But internet-savvy Ukrainians, including the country’s own Ministry of Foreign Affairs, recognize that how the facts are represented on Wikipedia matters. Right now, the number of people reading about Ukraine on Wikipedia is at an unprecedented high—spiking to more than 22 million English page views in the past month versus roughly 290,000 in February 2021. Meanwhile, Russia is coupling its lethal military campaign with a Goebbels-like propaganda blitz.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

University of Alabama in Huntsville: UAH helping create AI cell phone forensics tool to help police solve mass crimes. “There can be lots of forensic evidence on many people’s cell phones when a mass incident like a shooting or bombing is happens, but winnowing out the relevant material and putting it in context can be a time-consuming and tedious affair for law enforcement. That’s why The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH), Florida State University (FSU) and Purdue University have teamed to develop an artificial intelligence (AI) tool to help law enforcement target, extract and collate cell phone evidence related to an incident.”

BuzzFeed News: How Open-Source Intelligence Is Helping Clear The Fog Of War In Ukraine. “Countering propaganda is welcome, but some OSINT analysts also wonder about the ethical implications of their work. Melissa Hanham, an OSINT specialist affiliated with the Center for International Security and Cooperation at Stanford University, told BuzzFeed News that she believes that practitioners need to wrestle with some difficult questions: ‘Are OSINT analysis now actors in an active conflict? Can OSINT analysts change conflicts?'” Good afternoon, Internet…

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



March 3, 2022 at 01:34AM
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