Thursday, March 17, 2022

Thursday CoronaBuzz, March 17, 2022: 34 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Thursday CoronaBuzz, March 17, 2022: 34 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.
By ResearchBuzz

UPDATES

CNN: US Covid-19 community metrics continue to fall, but officials keep close eye on surge in Europe. “Only about 1.7 million people in the United States — less than 1% of the total population — live in counties where the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention still recommends universal indoor masking, according to the latest Covid-19 community level data, updated by the CDC on Thursday. This is about 5 million fewer people than last week, when about 2% of the US population lived in counties considered to have ‘high’ community levels.”

CORONAVIRUS MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

Los Angeles Times: The wellness community’s fight over COVID vaccine misinformation – Los Angeles Times. “The vaccination selfie, showing a gloved hand holding a needle and a smiling face hidden behind a mask, looked like thousands of others posted to Instagram as the COVID-19 vaccine rolled out across the U.S. But the comments it drew did not. Sell out puppet, sneered one user in response to Dr. Michael Greger’s photo. Burning your book tonight in my fire pit, said a second. Another simply wrote: 👎💔💩.”

Stuff New Zealand: Covid 19 NZ: The strange story of a man who has found fame in the anti-vaccination ecosystem. “This is the strange story of the man who went from complaining about “bullet-hard” lentils to becoming a leading voice in New Zealand’s anti-vax movement. Keith Lynch looks at how an alternative online ecosystem allows someone with seemingly little or no relevant background in vaccination to position themselves as an expert.”

Poynter: How memes are used to spread misinformation. “Memes can be fun ways to comment on current events or pop culture. They also build a sense of community on social media. Unfortunately, memes have also become a sneaky way to spread misinformation. This viral meme was shared on Facebook, stating that COVID-19 cases are much higher now than before there was a vaccine. To some, it could sound like the vaccine is causing this high number of cases. Here’s how we fact-checked it.”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

New York Times: Two Years of the Pandemic in New York, Step by Awful Step. “Two years and 40,000 deaths later, there remain rips and rifts in the social fabric that have not been repaired and may not be for a while. Something has been lost, some kind of trust perhaps. Time has been lost, definitely. And yet the dire predictions of a city damaged beyond repair proved wrong. As Plague Year 3 dawns, infection rates have plummeted. But the arrival of a new subvariant is also a reminder that the pandemic is not over.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

Washington Post: Pfizer and BioNTech to seek authorization of second coronavirus booster shot for people 65 and older. “Pharmaceutical giant Pfizer and its partner, BioNTech, will seek emergency authorization for a second booster shot of their coronavirus vaccine for people 65 and older, an effort to bolster waning immunity that occurs several months after the first booster, according to three people familiar with the situation.”

BBC: KFC-owner Yum sales plunge as China Covid cases surge. “The owner of KFC and Pizza Hut said sales plunged by 20% in the first two weeks of March as a surge of new Covid cases spread across China. Yum China said ‘the situation has rapidly deteriorated’ as regional lockdowns have been put in place to stem the outbreak. More than 1,100 of its stores are temporarily closed or offering takeaway and sales are ‘still trending down’.”

WORLD GOVERNMENT / NON-US GOVERNMENT

New York Times: In Africa, a Mix of Shots Drives an Uncertain Covid Vaccination Push. “In the tumbledown concrete room that has been commandeered as this sleepy African trading center’s Covid-19 vaccination headquarters, a battered freezer holds stacks of boxes with dozens of small glass vials. Stuffed among shots for rotavirus and measles are four brands of Covid vaccines.”

BBC: New Zealand border to reopen from next month, PM Ardern says. “New Zealand has brought forward plans to reopen its borders to international travellers after a Covid lockout of more than two years. Australians will be allowed to enter the country without needing to quarantine or isolate from 13 April. Fully vaccinated travellers from about 60 countries on a visa-waiver list will be able to arrive from 2 May. Those nations include the UK and US.”

Yonhap News Agency: (2nd LD) S. Korea’s new COVID-19 cases surpass somber 400,000 milestone amid omicron wave. ” South Korea’s new COVID-19 cases hit yet another somber milestone of more than 400,000 on Wednesday, driven by the dominant omicron variant spreading at an overwhelming speed. The country added 400,741 new daily COVID-19 infections, mostly locally transmitted, raising the total caseload to 7,629,275, the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA) said.”

The Mainichi: 10,221 new COVID cases recorded in Tokyo on March 16. “Japan’s capital reported 10,221 new COVID-19 cases on March 16, after recording 7,836 positive cases the day before, the Tokyo Metropolitan Government announced. Of the 10,221 newly infected people, 4,553 had received two COVID vaccine shots, 96 one shot, and 3,112 were unvaccinated. The vaccination status of 2,460 was unknown.”

Breaking News Ireland: Covid: Ireland logs 14,096 cases as WHO says recorded numbers the ‘tip of the iceberg’ . “Ireland logged 14,096 new cases of Covid-19 on Wednesday, as the World Health Organisation warned that a global surge in newly recorded cases could be just the ‘tip of the iceberg’ as countries reduce testing. 5,452 cases were confirmed by PCR testing in Ireland while 8,644 people registered a positive antigen test result through the HSE’s portal.”

Associated Press: South Korea’s omicron deaths surge amid faltering response. “South Korea reached another daily record in COVID-19 deaths on Thursday as health officials reported more than 621,000 new infections, underscoring a massive omicron surge that has been worse than feared and threatens to buckle an over-stretched hospital system. The 429 deaths reported in the latest 24 hours were nearly 140 more than the previous one-day record set on Tuesday. Fatalities may further rise in coming weeks considering the intervals between infections, hospitalizations and deaths.”

CNN: Irish Taoiseach abruptly leaves DC gala attended by Biden after testing positive for Covid-19. “Irish Prime Minister Micheál Martin, known as the Taoiseach, tested positive for Covid-19 Wednesday while attending a gala in Washington, DC, that had just been addressed by President Joe Biden.”

ABC News: UK easing COVID-19 testing, monitoring despite case uptick. “After dropping nearly all coronavirus restrictions last month, Britain is now ending some of its most widespread COVID-19 testing and monitoring programs, a move some scientists fear will complicate efforts to track the virus and detect worrisome new variants.”

UNITED STATES / UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

New York Times: Health Agency Under Cuomo ‘Misled the Public’ on Nursing Home Deaths. “The administration of former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo failed to publicly account for the deaths of about 4,100 nursing home residents in New York during the pandemic, according to an audit released on Tuesday by the state comptroller, Thomas P. DiNapoli. The audit found that Health Department officials at times underreported the full death toll by as much as 50 percent from April 2020 to February 2021, as Mr. Cuomo faced increasing scrutiny over whether his administration had intentionally concealed the actual number of deaths.”

Washington Post: TSA has investigated more than 3,800 mask-related incidents since mandate went into effect. “The Transportation Security Administration has investigated more than 3,800 incidents of potential violations involving the federal mask mandate, assessing more than $644,000 in civil penalties, according to a report this week by the Government Accountability Office. The TSA, charged with enforcing the mandate in airports and other public transportation settings, has issued more than 2,700 warning notices, the report said. It issued civil penalties in about 900 instances, roughly 24 percent of cases that occurred between Feb. 2, 2021, and March 7, 2022.”

ABC News: US retail spending slows as inflation starts to bite. “Retail sales increased 0.3% after registering a revised 4.9% jump from December to January, fueled by wage gains, solid hiring and more money in banking accounts, according to the Commerce Department. January’s increase was the biggest jump in spending since last March, when American households received a final federal stimulus check of $1,400.”

New York Times: At least nine House Democrats test positive for the coronavirus after a party retreat and late-night voting.. “At least nine House Democrats have announced in the last five days that they tested positive for the coronavirus, with more than half of those cases emerging after lawmakers attended a party retreat last week in Philadelphia.”

Reuters: Omicron sub-variant makes up 23.1% of COVID variants in U.S. – CDC. “The BA.2 sub-variant of Omicron was estimated to be 23.1% of the coronavirus variants circulating in the United States as of March 12, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said on Tuesday. Scientists are tracking a rise in cases caused by BA.2, which is spreading rapidly in parts of Asia and Europe.”

The Hill: CDC lowers COVID-19 warning on cruise ships from ‘high’ to ‘moderate’. “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) lowered its COVID-19 warning for cruise ships from ‘high’ to ‘moderate’ on Monday as the number of coronavirus cases in the U.S. decreases. The agency, however, still recommends that individuals boarding a cruise ship are ‘up to date’ with COVID-19 vaccines, including booster shots for those eligible and additional doses for individuals who are immunocompromised.”

Associated Press: Emhoff tests positive for COVID-19, VP Harris still negative. “Second gentleman Doug Emhoff has tested positive for COVID-19, the White House announced Tuesday. Vice President Kamala Harris tested negative, but is curtailing her schedule as a result of her husband’s positive test.”

Politico: Some hospitals ask patients, visitors to remove N95s, citing CDC. “They fear that surgical masks put the most vulnerable people at higher risk of catching Covid-19. N95s, which seal tighter to the face, offer better protection against the airborne virus, studies show. For more than a year, many have called on the Biden administration to change its guidance to offer more protection inside hospitals, even as mitigation measures have been dialed back and case counts decline. And yet, patients across the country say they are often told to replace their N95s with surgical masks as they enter hospitals.”

New York Times: Jeff Zients to Leave as Biden’s Covid Czar and Be Replaced by Ashish Jha. “Jeffrey D. Zients, an entrepreneur and management consultant who steered President Biden’s coronavirus response through successive pandemic waves and the largest vaccination campaign in American history, plans to leave the White House in April to return to private life, President Biden said in a statement.”

ABC News: New federal ventilation guidelines mark next step in fight against COVID. “The Biden administration will announce new building ventilation standards for schools and businesses on Thursday — a welcome step for experts who feel the U.S. has long been behind the curve on using air filtration as a valuable tool to fight COVID-19.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

San Francisco Chronicle: COVID, scandal, heartbreak: Vincent Zhou tries to move past Olympic nightmare. “Vincent Zhou gets another chance next week. It’s not the Olympics. But the skater from Palo Alto whose Beijing Olympics were derailed by a positive coronavirus test will compete in the World Figure Skating Championships, which begin Monday in Montpellier, France.”

Route Fifty: Lacking Mental Health Support, First Responders Turn to Peers. “Covid-19 revealed a mental health crisis among health care workers. A peer support group in Colorado is trying to help.”

SPORTS

New York Daily News: Unvaccinated Yankees and Mets can’t play at home under current NYC rules. “Unvaccinated players on the Yankees and Mets are covered by the same private sector employer mandate that is keeping Kyrie Irving off the court in Brooklyn, a City Hall spokesperson told the Daily News. Mayor Eric Adams repealed the Key2NYC vaccine mandate covering indoor spaces like gyms, dining and entertainment on Mar. 7. But Irving remained ineligible to play under a separate regulation: A private employer mandate put in place by the de Blasio administration on Dec. 27.”

HEALTH

NBC News: Scientists explore potential connection between Covid and diabetes. “Emerging evidence shows that the coronavirus — like some other viruses — can attack insulin-producing cells in the pancreas — a process that might trigger at least temporary diabetes in susceptible people. Rising cases might also reflect circumstances involving pandemic restrictions, including delayed medical care for early signs of diabetes or unhealthy eating habits and inactivity in people already at risk for Type 2 diabetes.”

TECHNOLOGY / INTERNET

Vox: The surprising link between Covid-19 deaths and … internet access. “This March, researchers at the University of Chicago published a study in the journal JAMA Network Open that showed one of the factors most consistently associated with a high risk of death due to Covid-19 in the US was the lack of internet access, whether broadband, dial-up, or cellular. This was regardless of other demographic risk factors like socioeconomic status, education, age, disability, rent burden, health insurance coverage, or immigration status.”

RESEARCH

New York Times: As Virus Data Mounts, the J.&J. Vaccine Holds Its Own. “Roughly 17 million Americans received the Johnson & Johnson Covid vaccine, only to be told later that it was the least protective of the options available in the United States. But new data suggest that the vaccine is now preventing infections, hospitalizations and deaths at least as well as the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines.”

Jerusalem Post: Fourth vaccine offers little protection against COVID-19 – study. “The study, published by The New England Journal of Medicine, examines the efficacy of the fourth coronavirus vaccine from Pfizer and Moderna. The interim results released show that the vaccine offers little to no protection against the virus when compared to young and healthy individuals vaccinated with three doses. However, the vaccine did prove to provide moderate protection against symptomatic infection among young and healthy individuals in comparison to those inoculated three times.”

CRIME / SECURITY / LEGAL

WRAL: Garner man uses fake companies named after Game of Thrones references to scam government out of $1.7 million. “Tristan Bishop Pan, 40, submitted false Paycheck Protection Program loan applications designated for small businesses. He made false claims about companies he didn’t own and employees he didn’t have, according to federal court documents. He named his companies using references to the popular book series ‘Game of Thrones,’ including names and titles like Khaleesi, White Walkers and the Night’s Watch.”

POLITICS

New York Times: In Impasse Over New Covid Relief Aid, Neither Side Is Willing to Bend. “The White House wants more money for treatments, tests, vaccines and research, but Republicans in Congress insist the administration will have to repurpose existing funds.”

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



March 18, 2022 at 04:35AM
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Tracking Civilian Harms, UNESCO Body Armor, Disinformation Spread, More: Ukraine Update, Afternoon, March 17, 2022

Tracking Civilian Harms, UNESCO Body Armor, Disinformation Spread, More: Ukraine Update, Afternoon, March 17, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Bellingcat: Hospitals Bombed and Apartments Destroyed: Mapping Incidents of Civilian Harm in Ukraine. “Readers are invited to explore the map by date and location. It must be noted that only incidents that have been pictured, captured on video or posted to social media are included in Bellingcat’s dataset. It is likely that there will be many other instances of civilian harm that are not documented on video or on social media and therefore not included in the TimeMap. Even accounting for that caveat, the number of incidents detailed in our dataset and TimeMap at time of initial publication is already significant.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

New York Times: UNESCO will send body armor to Ukrainian journalists.. “The United Nations’ cultural agency said on Thursday that it was sending body armor and helmets to Ukraine to help protect Ukrainian journalists, many of whom have gone from covering local news to suddenly becoming war correspondents. At least four journalists, including a Ukrainian, have been killed covering the fighting since Russia began its invasion last month.”

Washington Post: Why the Kremlin is still active on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube. “Western political leaders have hailed decisions by tech companies to suspend or muffle Russian state media such as RT and Sputnik amid the war in Ukraine, and there’s evidence those moves are having an impact. Yet official Kremlin accounts have largely escaped such restrictions, continuing to post freely on Twitter and other U.S.-based social platforms even as their owners rain bombs on Ukrainian cities.”

Reuters: Facebook removes more Russian posts claiming children’s hospital bombing in Ukraine was a hoax. “Russian Embassy accounts on Twitter, Facebook and Telegram had posted that reports of Russia bombing a children’s hospital in Ukraine were a hoax. As a result, Facebook removed these posts, said a company spokesperson.”

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

Mashable: How a pregnant Ukrainian Instagram influencer was used in a Russian disinformation campaign. “Marianna Vishegirskaya, one of many injured pregnant women at the decimated Mariupol hospital was targeted by a Russian disinformation campaign that tried – and ultimately failed – to flip the blame and attempt to disprove the reality of the deadly attack. Vishegirskaya was likely targeted because she’s a popular internet personality in Ukraine, known as @gixie_beauty on Instagram.”

Scientific American: Russia Is Using ‘Digital Repression’ to Suppress Dissent. “As Russia’s invasion of Ukraine drags on, an information war is raging alongside the physical fighting. Russia’s recent attempts to spread disinformation have not yet found great success in the West. Within the country, however, President Vladimir Putin’s regime is controlling the narrative through censorship, state control of media and other forms of digital repression. This term refers to a variety of practices that use digital tools to stamp out dissent through a combination of actions, both online and offline.”

Washington Post: Computer programmers are taking aim at Russia’s propaganda wall. “Since the days of the Cold War, when U.S.-government-funded stations such as Radio Free Europe broadcast anti-communist messaging across the airwaves of Soviet states, the West has tried, often futilely, to pierce the propaganda bubble that surrounds and isolates the Russian populace. But the Internet has sent those information-war efforts into overdrive, allowing everyday people to pitch in on imaginative efforts designed to reach strangers thousands of miles away.”

Bloomberg: Meta’s Russia Problem Is Up to Nick Clegg, Not Mark Zuckerberg, to Solve. “Shortly after Russian troops invaded his country in February, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy sent separate letters to Meta Platforms Inc. Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg and Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg. He wanted them to block Russia’s state-backed media outlets from posting to Facebook in Ukraine; he also asked that they cut off Facebook and Instagram in Russia itself. Neither Zuckerberg nor Sandberg responded. Instead, Zelenskiy heard from Nick Clegg, Britain’s former deputy prime minister, who’s worked the past three years as a high-ranking executive at Meta.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Washington Post: Russian government websites face ‘unprecedented’ wave of hacking attacks, ministry says. “Russian government websites and state-run media face an ‘unprecedented’ wave of hacking attacks, the government said Thursday, prompting regulators to filter traffic coming from abroad. In a statement, the Ministry of Digital Development and Communications said the attacks were at least twice as powerful as any previous ones. It did not elaborate on what filtering measures had been implemented, but in the past, this has often meant barring Russian government websites to users abroad.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Daily Beast: How Russian Disinformation Goes From the Kremlin to QAnon to Fox News . “Eto Buziashvili, a research associate at the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab (where we both work), has worked on a team tracking biolab rumors from Russian and Chinese sources for more than two years. She told me that while Russia first used narratives and disinformation related to biolabs to threaten or distract from its own actions, ‘now the narratives are one of main justifications of the invasion.’ She added that Russian military officials have since presented forged documents as additional ‘proof’ of those supposed justifications. Though some experts and news headlines have already declared Russian propaganda efforts surrounding its invasion of Ukraine a flop, those declarations were perhaps premature.”

NPR: Deepfake video of Zelenskyy could be ‘tip of the iceberg’ in info war, experts warn. “The video, which shows a rendering of the Ukrainian president appearing to tell his soldiers to lay down their arms and surrender the fight against Russia, is a so-called deepfake that ran about a minute long. It is not yet clear who created the deepfake, but government officials in Ukraine have been warning for weeks about the possibility of Russia spreading manipulated videos as part of its information warfare. Ukraine’s military intelligence agency released a video this month about how state-sponsored deepfakes could be used to sow panic and confusion.”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

MakeUseOf: You Can Now Watch the Ukrainian President’s Comedy Show on Netflix. “Servant of the People is a show that features former actor Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the current Ukrainian president. The show ran locally between 2015 and 2019, with Zelenskyy playing a teacher who, quite ironically, ended up becoming the country’s president. The show ended when Zelenskyy ran for president, and it is believed his popularity in the show helped him get elected.”

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March 18, 2022 at 01:32AM
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Air Transport CO2 Emissions, Google I/O, Open Textbook Library, More: Thursday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, March 17, 2022

Air Transport CO2 Emissions, Google I/O, Open Textbook Library, More: Thursday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, March 17, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development: Statistical Insights: A new near-real-time global database on CO2 emissions from air transport. “Air transport facilitates international trade and tourism and contributes to economic growth and job creation, but it also produces carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions that contribute to global warming. The OECD has developed a new database using a near real-time data source from the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) to produce estimates of CO2 emissions from air transport.”

EVENTS

The Verge: Google I/O takes place May 11th and 12th, and it will be fully available online. “Google’s big annual developer conference, Google I/O, will take place May 11th and 12th, the company announced Wednesday. The event will once again be fully online, though it sounds like at least some of the conference will be streamed live from the Shoreline Amphitheatre, a frequent Google I/O venue.” The event will be free and open to the public.

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Campus Technology: Open Textbook Library Reaches 1,000 Titles. “Just in time for its 10-year anniversary, the Open Textbook Library’s collection of open education resources has surpassed 1,000 titles. Launched in 2012, the Library is an online catalog of openly licensed materials hosted by the Open Education Network (OEN), a membership community based at the University of Minnesota’s Center for Open Education.”

Google Blog: New tools for hotels to reconnect with travelers. “As travel interest rebounds, businesses need easy ways to connect with potential customers. So today, we’re announcing new tools to help hoteliers find people who are ready to book their next trip.”

USEFUL STUFF

MakeUseOf: These 4 Chrome Extensions Let You Browse With Your Voice. “Google has a huge range of impressive accessibility functions baked into its Chrome browser by default. But if you’re the type of person who struggles with extended typing and clicking, or just prefers to use their voice, then you might find the browser a little wanting. Luckily, the Chrome Web Store has an incredible slew of extensions you can use to adjust just about any part of your browsing experience.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

STAT News: Doctors often turn to Google Translate to talk to patients. They want a better option. “‘I do think it is the future,’ said Breena Taira, a clinical emergency medicine researcher at UCLA Health whose recent study evaluated Google-translated discharge instructions in seven languages. Tech giants like Google and Microsoft, which have invested heavily in voice recognition software, have expressed interest in exploring medical translation. ‘We just have to be really aware of what the limitations are,’ Taira said, including significantly lower accuracy rates for languages that aren’t widely spoken.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

KCRA: Bill would allow lawsuits against social media companies for addicting children. “A new assembly bill being introduced in California would put big tech companies on the hook if children get addicted to the technology and experience side effects, like depression or even suicide. The bill would establish that companies running big social media platforms, like TikTok and Instagram, would have a duty not to addict children. Violating that duty could then open them up to facing lawsuits.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Laptop Magazine: Google-inspired smart glasses for the blind adds eye-catching new features — here’s how it works. “AI-powered smart glasses, tailor-made for the blind and visually impaired, made a splash in the adaptive tech industry when Envision, an award-winning assistive technology innovator, debuted the snazzy, tech-infused eyewear at the 2020 CSUN Conference. Today, Envision announced that it packed its high-tech spectacles with brand spankin’ new, eye-catching features that will enhance the day-to-day lives of low-vision users.”

WIRED: The End of Infinite Data Storage Can Set You Free. “WHILE THE AGE of inexpensive or free personal data storage is far from over, its slowing expansion presents an opportunity to reimagine our relationship with the information that we possess as individuals and as a society. At the individual level, we might develop better systems for organizing, prioritizing, and even discarding the information that we accumulate—not because we’re concerned about running out of space, but because our hoarding behavior diminishes the utility of the information that is truly valuable. A more decisive attitude toward what belongs in our personal archives might improve our understanding of what information we actually value, while also enabling us to undertake similar efforts at the collective scale.”

Techdirt: With Truth Social Having Trouble Attracting Users, Will Trump/Nunes Realize That There’s More To Managing A Social Media Site Than Grievances?. “…some of us have been pointing out for years that there’s a lot more to building a successful internet company than the idea or publicity. Execution matters, and mere grievances are not execution. And, sometimes, part of that execution is figuring out how to make your site into the kind of place people actually want to visit. And, sometimes, that means banning trolls, assholes, and hate mongers… rather than pretending that’s what makes a site useful.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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March 18, 2022 at 12:25AM
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Brookings Sanctions Tracker, Zelenskyy Deepfake, Virtual Violin Concert, More: Ukraine Update, March 17, 2022

Brookings Sanctions Tracker, Zelenskyy Deepfake, Virtual Violin Concert, More: Ukraine Update, March 17, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Brookings Institution: Mapping financial countermeasures against Russian aggression: Introducing the Brookings Sanctions Tracker. “Tracking and aggregating these rapidly evolving and wide-ranging sanctions is a substantial undertaking. To help fill this gap, the Leveraging Transparency to Reduce Corruption Initiative at Brookings (a joint initiative with Results for Development) has launched a new tracker, working with Human Rights First and REDRESS, that consolidates sanctions against Russian individuals and entities into one central repository. ”

EVENTS

My Modern Met: Violinists From 29 Countries Around the World Play Moving Virtual Concert in Support of Ukraine . “In a moving video, almost 100 violinists join together in one voice to express their support for Ukraine during this time of war—all without speaking a single word. The virtual concert features professional and famous violinists from 29 different countries as they join in unison to accompany several dedicated musicians in Ukraine who play their instruments from basement bomb shelters.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

CNET: Facebook Parent Meta Removes Deepfake Video of Ukrainian President Zelenskyy . “Facebook’s parent company Meta said Wednesday it removed a deepfake video of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy for violating the social network’s rules against manipulated media.”

Engadget: Twitter actioned over 50,000 pieces of misleading Ukraine content. “Twitter said it has ‘labeled or removed’ more than 50,000 pieces of content that broke its policy on manipulated media in the wake of Russia’s attack on Ukraine, the company shared in a blog post today. Additionally, the platform removed roughly 75,000 accounts for ‘inauthentic behavior’ and spam.”

AFP/Moscow Times: Russia Blocks Access to BBC, Vows More Media Retaliation. “Russia’s media watchdog Roskomnadzor on Wednesday blocked access to the BBC’s main news website, with Moscow’s Foreign Ministry warning of more retaliatory measures against the media. ‘I think this is only the beginning of retaliatory measures to the information war unleashed by the West against Russia,’ Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on Telegram.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

TechCrunch: Russia’s war hits Yandex, the ‘Google of Russia’. “Putin’s regime continues to tighten its grip on how information on the war in Ukraine is shared in Russia, and in the wake of that, tech giants in the country — which, like Facebook, Google and Twitter, are also major players in the media sphere — are starting to restructure their media assets.”

Lawfare Podcast: How Open-Source Investigators are Documenting the War in Ukraine. “An enormous number of researchers have devoted their time to sifting through social media posts, satellite images, and even Google Maps to track what’s happening in Ukraine and debunk false claims about the conflict. This week on Arbiters of Truth, our series on the online information ecosystem, we devoted the show to understanding how open-source investigations work and why they’re important.”

Wall Street Journal: Russian Artists Feel a New Cultural Chill in the West. “Vladimir Putin’s siege of Ukraine is forcing all types of cultural institutions to wrestle with their role as platforms for artists representing Russia, from current filmmakers and classical-music stars to timeless greats like Tchaikovsky. As governments enforce sanctions on the Russian government and corporations break with Russian businesses, arts groups are facing a similar question: Should they cut ties or not?”

UChicago News: UChicago launches scholarships and comprehensive support for students and scholars impacted by war in Ukraine. “As part of a comprehensive effort to support students and scholars impacted by the war in Ukraine, the University of Chicago announced today that it will provide full-tuition scholarships for undergraduate students affected by the invasion.” This is one of several Ukraine-related initiatives.

SECURITY & LEGAL

Mashable: Ukraine is legalising the cryptocurrency market . “Ukraine will soon legally recognise cryptocurrency, after President Volodymyr Zelenskyy signed a virtual assets bill into law on Wednesday. Under the new legislation, Ukraine will be able to establish a legal, regulated crypto market.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

University of Nevada Las Vegas: Propaganda Pollution: UNLV Expert on Russia’s Information Warfare. “Ukraine native, chemist, and policy researcher Mary Blankenship explains how one aspect of the Russia-Ukraine war is being fought online, on TV, and on social media platforms.”

The Verge: “We Don’t Live In A Research Bubble”: The Hopes And Fears Driving An Online Movement To Help Ukrainian Researchers . “Members of the international scientific community have also found it hard to look away from the conflict or ignore the plight of their colleagues like [Vitalii] Palchykov. In recent weeks, this desire to help has resulted in an earnest and extensive online movement made up of individuals, groups of volunteers, and institutions, which are using the internet and social media to offer Ukrainian scientists and students affected by war all the support they can: jobs, a place to continue their studies, a new home.”

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 17, 2022 at 06:46PM
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Lenczner Slaght Supreme Court of Canada Database, New York Wage/Employment Transparency, Keeping It Civil, More: Thursday ResearchBuzz, March 17, 2022

Lenczner Slaght Supreme Court of Canada Database, New York Wage/Employment Transparency, Keeping It Civil, More: Thursday ResearchBuzz, March 17, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Spotted in my Google Alerts and then chased all over Google for a while: The Lenczner Slaght Supreme Court of Canada Database. From the “About” article on the front page: “This database includes information about each reported decision of the Supreme Court of Canada from 1954 onward. … The authors of this database hope that it will provide a useful resource for academics and practicing lawyers alike who are interested in the decisions and judges of the Supreme Court of Canada.”

State of New York: Governor Hochul Announces Launch of New Online Wage and Employment Tools as Part of Continued Commitment to Transparency. “Governor Kathy Hochul today announced the launch of two new interactive online resources designed to improve transparency and enhance access to employment statistics and occupational wage information. The Current Employment Statistics dashboard provides monthly estimates of non-farm employment, hours, and earnings by industry for New York State, metropolitan areas, and counties outside of metropolitan areas. The Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics dashboard provides estimates of employment and wages for nearly 800 job titles across New York State.”

Arizona State University: ‘Keeping It Civil’ podcast dedicated to improving civil discourse. “From a young age, Americans are often told to avoid controversial topics such as politics and race. But avoiding them altogether may have contributed to today’s political polarization. Instead, Americans should engage in civil discourse. That is the rationale behind the relaunch of the podcast ‘Keeping It Civil,’ a partnership between Arizona State University’s School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership (SCETL) and Arizona PBS. ‘Keeping It Civil’ is dedicated to creating space for disagreement on relevant topics and bridging political polarization through civil discourse.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

USDA: USDA NASS to livestream agricultural data briefings, enhances public access to valuable information. “On March 30, USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) will livestream the Secretary of Agriculture’s data report briefing for the first time. This and future Secretary data briefings will stream on NASS’s YouTube channel five minutes after NASS reports are released to the public.”

The Verge: Google Stadia is subtly reinventing itself to attract new games and gamers. “Google’s Stadia cloud gaming service didn’t stick the landing, and it’s been a rough ride since. But today, at the Google for Games Developer Summit, it feels like Stadia might be moving in a promising direction — one that gives both gamers and game developers a reason to pay attention. And the magic word is ‘free.'”

CNET: Snap Opens Up Ways to Add AR Layers to the Real World. “Snap’s AR Landmarkers, which can layer AR on top of real-world 3D-scanned places, are opening up for developers to start building on their own. Snap sees this AR layer as a key piece of its own road to AR glasses.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Los Angeles Times: Why this L.A. TikTok star dreamed of boxing glory. “In the last decade, the number of people who make money as a ‘creator’ — a person who creates video, photo or digital content primarily on social media — has grown to more than 50 million people worldwide, including 2 million who do it as a full-time job, according to data released in 2020 by San Francisco venture capital firm SignalFire. But gaining new fans for creators or influencers has become increasingly challenging, as the once-nascent social media platforms have now grown to massive, global video libraries where it’s difficult to stand out from the crowd. That’s where boxing comes in.”

Springfield News-Leader: Federal grant expands library’s online photo collection of Ozarks’ life and history. “A $10,000 federal grant is expanding the Springfield-Greene County Library’s online digital collection of photographs ‘vividly documenting a period of rapid change in Springfield and the Ozarks.’ Part of the digital collection ‘From the Darkroom,’ library staff will add 5,000 more digital images to the nearly 29,000 images already acquired. Those images originate from the Springfield News-Leader’s estimated 2.7 million photographs and negatives from 1945 to 2011.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Government Executive: DOJ’s New FOIA Guidance Promotes Openness. “In July 2016, President Obama signed a law that codified the ‘presumption of openness’ that he championed during his first year in office and later received mixed reviews on, as Government Executive reported in 2015. The new guidance from Garland follows Obama’s goals of a ‘presumption of openness’ and directs agencies ‘make it clear that the Justice Department will not defend nondisclosure decisions that fail to do so,’ said the Justice Department.”

Bleeping Computer: Hundreds of GoDaddy-hosted sites backdoored in a single day. “Internet security analysts have spotted a spike in backdoor infections on WordPress websites hosted on GoDaddy’s Managed WordPress service, all featuring an identical backdoor payload. The case affects internet service resellers such as MediaTemple, tsoHost, 123Reg, Domain Factory, Heart Internet, and Host Europe Managed WordPress.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

PsyPost: Longitudinal study reveals how using the internet as a form of escape can end in increased depressive symptoms . “New research suggests that using the internet as an escape from worry may be harmless in the short term, but can lead to emotional issues down the line. The study found that people with a greater tendency to use the internet as a distraction had higher average levels of problematic internet use and depression. The findings were published in the journal Computers in Human Behavior.”

The Register: Even complex AI models are failing 5th grade science . “Researchers from the University of Arizona, Microsoft, and the Allen Institute for AI tested several different state-of-the-art agents and found them readily able to answer the ‘what’ of a situation, but incapable of determining the ‘how’ of them.” Good morning, Internet…

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March 17, 2022 at 05:35PM
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Wednesday, March 16, 2022

Ernest Hemingway, Fossil Leaves, Indigenous Knowledge, More: Wednesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, March 16, 2022

Ernest Hemingway, Fossil Leaves, Indigenous Knowledge, More: Wednesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, March 16, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

University of St. Thomas: 13-Year Research Collaboration Explores Untapped Hemingway. “In the fall of 2009, four University of St. Thomas English students, their professor, and a librarian met in a far corner of O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library to begin what would become a 13-year collaboration creating an annotated bibliography on the life and art of the most celebrated American author of the 20th century: Ernest Hemingway…. Hundreds of articles, books, blogs and reviews appear annually on Hemingway, and now, they’re searchable across the globe via St. Thomas’ recently launched annotated bibliography on the author.”

PennState: From museum to laptop: Visual leaf library a new tool for identifying plants. “Fossil plants reveal the evolution of green life on Earth, but the most abundant samples that are found — fossil leaves — are also the most challenging to identify. A large, open-access visual leaf library developed by a Penn State-led team provides a new resource to help scientists recognize and classify these leaves.”

CBC: Innovative atlas puts Indigenous knowledge on the map — literally — to help tackle climate crisis. “Hetxw’ms Gyetxw is Gitxsan, a matrilineal society which doesn’t use last names. He goes by his full traditional name…. The Indigenous Knowledges component of the Climate Atlas of Canada, launched today, is the culmination of years of work by Hetxw’ms Gyetxw and the team at the University of Winnipeg’s Prairie Climate Centre, in collaboration with Indigenous communities across the country. ”

EVENTS

University at Buffalo: AI and data science institute launches speaker series. “Last year, the University at Buffalo merged two institutes on data science and artificial intelligence to form a new Institute for Artificial Intelligence and Data Science…. Now, the institute has launched a speaker series designed to bring the fields’ most thought-provoking leaders to UB.” The events are anticipated to take place monthly. The public can attend either virtually or in person.

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Outside Business Journal: Outside Inc. acquires sports database Fastest Known Time. “Outside Inc., Outside Business Journal’s Boulder, Colo.-based parent company, has announced its acquisition of Fastest Known Time (FKT), an online database of speed records in running, hiking, and endurance sports.”

The Verge: iOS 15.4 now live as Universal Control comes to iPads and Macs. “iOS 15.4, the latest version of Apple’s iPhone operating system, has been released and should soon be available to download ahead of the Friday release of Apple’s new third-generation iPhone SE and green iPhone 13. The update includes big new features like the ability to use Face ID while wearing a mask, alongside smaller additions like a handful of new emoji.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Little League Baseball: Little League® International To Launch Content Series to Celebrate 75 Years of the Little League Baseball® World Series. “As the countdown to the 75th Anniversary of the Little League Baseball® World Series (LLBWS) this August gears up, Little League® International is set to launch a 75-part content series that highlights some of the key moments, memories, and people that have made the LLBWS one of the most iconic sporting events in the world.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

TechRadar Pro: Thousands of mobile app cloud databases have been left exposed online. “Businesses continue to leave their cloud databases unsecured online despite the risk of company data and even user data being exposed. Following a three month study, Check Point Research (CPR) found 2,113 mobile applications whose databases were unprotected in the cloud and could be accessed by anyone with a browser.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Arizona State University: Professor: How TikTok can affect marginalized communities. “If you jumped on TikTok Monday morning, you might have seen a video of a toddler talking to herself in front of a mirror, a rooster wearing blue pants or a three-minute makeup tutorial: Fun, harmless stuff from the social media site that boasts more than 800 million active users, including 60 million in the United States alone. But in a panel series held the last two weekends, the focus was not on silly, 30-second videos, but on the experience on TikTok for marginalized creators.”

New York Times: ‘No-Code’ Brings the Power of A.I. to the Masses. “A growing number of new products allow anyone to apply artificial intelligence without having to write a line of computer code. Proponents believe the ‘no-code’ movement will change the world.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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March 17, 2022 at 12:42AM
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Learning Ukrainian, Building a Sanctions Tracker, Biolab Conspiracy Theories, More: Ukraine Update, March 16, 2022

Learning Ukrainian, Building a Sanctions Tracker, Biolab Conspiracy Theories, More: Ukraine Update, March 16, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

MakeUseOf: Why Mozilla Has Removed Russian Search Engines From Firefox. “Mozilla has decided to remove all Russian search engine providers from its Firefox browser. The move comes after multiple claims that Yandex and Mail.ru have been favoring Russian state-sponsored content in the results. Here, we’ll take a look at when Mozilla is removing these search engines, and why the company is removing them.”

Axios: Slack has started disconnecting customers in Russia. “Slack has begun cutting off access to some customers in Russia as it looks to comply with both international sanctions and the policies of parent company Salesforce. Why it matters: Slack is the lifeblood for internal communications at many businesses and organizations and often contains data and messages not stored in any other format.”

Mashable: Duolingo reports a 485% increase of people studying Ukrainian. “Use of the language learning app Duolingo has surged since the start of the war in Ukraine. According to a statement on Monday from CEO and co-founder Luis von Ahn, Duolingo has seen a 485 percent increase in the number of users learning Ukrainian. The increase, which was reported in Morning Brew on Wednesday, is global, but is mostly coming from the U.S., the location of the majority of its users.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Online Journalism Blog: How CORRECTIV launched a live sanctions tracker in under a week. “German investigative non-profit CORRECTIV launched its sanctions tracker less than a week after the invasion of Ukraine. In an interview with OJB, Olaya Argüeso Perez talks about the background to the project, how it’s been used — and what they’ve learned since.”

TechTarget: AI and disinformation in the Russia-Ukraine war. “Opening her Facebook account on March 10, one of the first things Aleksandra Przegalinska saw on her newsfeed was a post from a Russian troll spreading disinformation and praising Russian President Vladimir Putin. The post claimed Putin was doing a good job in the Russia-Ukraine war. As someone following the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, the AI expert and Polish university administrator was taken back by what she believed to be an inaccurate post.”

Washington Post: Apple and Google app stores remain available in Russia. That may be a good thing.. “Ukraine’s digital officials and some tech-savvy expatriates in the United States have been calling for Apple and Google to cut Russia off from their app stores and for security company Cloudflare to stop protecting Pravda and Russian war propaganda sites from state-backed and activist hackers. But civil liberties groups and American officials are pushing the other way, arguing that the three California companies provide ordinary Russians with the means to find independent news sources and to connect to activists and nonprofit organizations opposed to the war in Ukraine.”

Media Matters: Facebook and Instagram have allowed and profited from advertising pushing the false Ukraine-US biolabs conspiracy theory . “Meta has repeatedly allowed — and profited from — ads pushing a false conspiracy theory about biolabs in Ukraine which has been linked to both Russian propaganda and supporters of the QAnon conspiracy theory. The ads, which have run on Facebook and Instagram, both owned by Meta, violate the platforms’ misinformation rules.”

CNN: Why Ukraine war misinformation is so hard to police. “In some ways, it’s the latest in a long list of recent crises — from the pandemic to the Capitol riot — that have spurred the spread of potentially harmful misinformation. But misinformation experts say there are key differences between the war in Ukraine and other misinformation events that make false claims about the conflict especially insidious and difficult to counter.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Reuters: Think tank calls for EU database to help trace oligarchs’ assets. “The European Union should create an asset database to help to track down the owners of assets held by shell companies and make EU sanctions against Russian oligarchs more effective, a think tank said on Wednesday. The 27-nation EU has imposed restrictions on 877 individuals, including wealthy Russian oligarchs and other prominent business people, over Russia’s aggression against Ukraine.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

The Conversation: Ukraine: how social media images from the ground could be affecting our response to the war. “At present, we are witnessing an unprecedented pan-European humanitarian effort spearheaded by citizens who are generously offering shelter and aid to Ukrainians. Back in 2015, there were heated debates among EU governments concerning the level of support that they could offer, and European politicians often struggled to gain approval from their citizens to welcome Syrians. There are of course substantial historical and geopolitical factors that probably contribute to these differing responses. But one other likely influence relates to the way in which this war is being visually communicated in western media – from newspapers and television broadcasts to Twitter, Instagram and TikTok – and the emotional responses these images elicit.”

Wall Street Journal: TikTok’s Pullback in Russia Leaves More Space for Pro-Kremlin Propaganda. “TikTok is censoring its content in Russia more heavily than it said it would, blocking access to most overseas accounts and leaving a content vacuum that is being partially filled by state media propaganda, researchers and users in the country say.”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

CBS 4 Miami: Shortwave Radio Signal From Florida Cow Pasture Reaches Russia Carrying Latest News. “A massive shortwave radio antenna sits in a cow pasture north of Lake Okeechobee in Central Florida…. WRMI stands for Radio Miami International and worldwide coverage means it can easily send signals into Ukraine and Russia. Shortwave is old school technology, think of World War II or the Cold War, as American-produced news beamed behind the iron curtain. Now, during the invasion of Ukraine, Russia has shut down journalism as we know it.”

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March 16, 2022 at 11:58PM
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