Friday, December 16, 2022

Alabama Channels, Nuestra Cosa, Google Knowledge Panels, More: Friday ResearchBuzz, December 16, 2022

Alabama Channels, Nuestra Cosa, Google Knowledge Panels, More: Friday ResearchBuzz, December 16, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Birmingham Watch: Recorded State Government Meetings Available Through New League of Women Voters Channel . “The League of Women Voters has established a channel on which citizens can watch videos of the state Senate, House of Representatives and legislative committee meetings, searchable by keywords and phrases. The Alabama Channel is a new project of the League of Women Voters of Alabama Education Fund.”

UC Riverside: Historic Chicano student newspaper made available online. “For decades, Nuestra Cosa provided a platform for UC Riverside’s Chicano students to share their stories, poetry, and art with the campus. After the newspaper stopped publishing in 2012, much of that history became harder to find, with back issues tattered or fading away. A new project has made those voices available once again in a digital collection where readers can browse through the 40-year span of the newspaper.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Android Police: Google smartens up Search with dynamically themed knowledge panels. “Back in September at the Search On conference, Google talked about plans to make Search’s knowledge panel more contemporary, while remaining equally informative, and now we’re finally starting to see that enhanced interface arrive.”

Bloomberg: Hong Kong to ‘Use All Means’ Against Google Over National Anthem. “Hong Kong has strongly criticized Alphabet Inc.’s Google for failing to ensure the city’s correct national anthem features prominently on its search page. Typing in Hong Kong national anthem into the search box brings up articles and videos about Glory to Hong Kong, the unofficial anthem of the mass protests that rocked the financial hub in 2019, instead of China’s March of the Volunteers.”

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

CBS News: “Iron Man,” “The Little Mermaid,” “When Harry Met Sally” among movies named to National Film Registry. “The latest additions also include John Waters’ camp musical-comedy ‘Hairspray’ (1988); ‘Carrie,’ Brian De Palma’s 1976 adaptation of the Stephen King thriller, starring Sissy Spacek as a teenager gifted with telekinesis; and ‘Cyrano de Bergerac’ (1950), for which José Ferrer became the first Hispanic actor to win a best actor Oscar.”

Charity Today: Historic Disability Rights Movement to be archived, thanks to lottery grant. “The four-year project will record and digitise these unique social history and heritage stories. These will be used to create an accessible and interactive website that is dedicated to the story of the Disability Rights Movement in the UK.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Rolling Stone: Russian Trolls Made Fake Kid Rock Fan Accounts — and Fooled Donald Trump Jr.. “Researchers found Russian-linked fake accounts posing as authentic American conservatives cross-posting content to personas on Truth Social, Gab, and Gettr. While right-wing social platforms like Gab and Parler have previously played host to Russian influence operations, the report marks the first documented case of Russian meddling on Truth Social, the social media app founded by Trump.”

CoinDesk: Canadian Securities Regulators to Strengthen Crypto Oversight After FTX Collapse. “The body, which consists of securities regulators from each of the 10 provinces and three territories in Canada, said it would be expanding its existing requirements for platforms that are currently operating in the country.”

CNBC: Sen. Warren presses Defense Secretary about ex-Google CEO Schmidt’s potential conflicts when he advised Pentagon on AI. “Sen. Elizabeth Warren on Tuesday pressed Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin about his agency’s enforcement of conflict-of-interest rules for federal advisory boards, zeroing in on former Google CEO Eric Schmidt after CNBC reported on his past involvement on influential panels in an industry where he was an investor.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Slate: The Internet Is Having Its Midlife Crisis. “Many of us who have grown up along with the web are now reaching middle age, and we have enough experience with the internet to know what it does well and does poorly. And as with any midlife crisis, the internet can spiral into the abyss, continuing its own self-destructive pathway, or we can seize the moment to build a better internet founded on the essential principle that the internet belongs to all of us.”

WIRED: ChatGPT’s Fluent BS Is Compelling Because Everything Is Fluent BS. “The discourse around ChatGPT has flagged the damaging effect it might have on society, everything from the model encouraging torture and perpetuating sexism to enabling kids to cheat on their homework…. But to be honest, old-fashioned human-generated fluent bullshit—weaponized by social media—has already been pretty disastrous.”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

Penn State: Model shows how intelligent-like behavior can emerge from non-living agents. “A new model by a team of researchers led by Penn State and inspired by [Michael] Crichton’s novel describes how biological or technical systems form complex structures equipped with signal-processing capabilities that allow the systems to respond to stimulus and perform functional tasks without external guidance.” Good morning, Internet…

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December 16, 2022 at 06:31PM
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Thursday, December 15, 2022

Brian Friel, Linktree, Form Builders, More: Thursday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 15, 2022

Brian Friel, Linktree, Form Builders, More: Thursday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 15, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

The Irish News: New Brian Friel digital archive launched by Queen’s University. “QUEEN’S University Belfast has launched a Brian Friel digital archive providing access to drafts of the acclaimed Irish playwright’s works, including handwritten notes from some of his best known plays.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Tubefilter: Here’s what Linktree’s 30 million users linked to in 2022. “Linktree’s 30 million users generated nearly 20 million clicks per month on monetized links. By tracking the destinations of those links, two big winners come to the fore: BeReal and TikTok.”

USEFUL STUFF

MakeUseOf: 5 Free Online Form Builders to Create Beautiful and Easy Surveys. “Google Forms is the internet’s favorite free form builder, and rightly so. You can do so much with it. But that doesn’t mean it’s the only form builder you should consider. A few new form builders are making the process more user-friendly in different ways, like Tally, which works like a Doc, or NueForm, which makes it easier to create ‘slide forms’ that show one question at a time.”

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

WIRED: A Row Erupts Over Texas’ Bold Bitcoin Battery Plan. “The plan to use crypto mines as giant batteries is controversial, to say the least. Ed Hirs, an energy fellow at the University of Houston, claims the battery analogy is ‘nonsense’ because miners don’t store and release energy, but rather only promise to stop consuming when it’s urgently needed elsewhere. And he disputes the idea that crypto mining will bring additional energy generation to the grid, which he describes as misdirection designed to distract from the price increases people will incur due to an overall rise in energy demand.”

The Verge: Livestreaming has gotten big, but is it business?. “Now, at any given moment, you can find thousands or even tens of thousands tuning in live to watch a court trial or a high school chemistry class or a Funko Pop collector selling his prized possession. How did we get to a point where livestreaming might be big business? We get into all that and more in the show.” ~36 minute podcast, I don’t see a link to a transcript.

SECURITY & LEGAL

CBS News: TikTok faces growing national security concerns: “It’s not just the collection or theft of that data”. “The Biden administration is investigating TikTok’s plan to house its data in the U.S. as part of a sweeping years-long review over whether the company’s ties to China are a national security threat. It’s unclear when the probe will end. And more scrutiny is on the way.”

The Register: Pwn2Own contest concludes with nearly $1m paid out to ethical hackers . “Pwn2Own paid out almost $1 million to bug hunters at last week’s consumer product hacking event in Toronto, but the prize money wasn’t big enough attract attempts at cracking the iPhone or Google Pixel because miscreants can score far more from less wholesome sources.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

TechCrunch: OpenAI’s attempts to watermark AI text hit limits. “Did a human write that, or ChatGPT? It can be hard to tell — perhaps too hard, its creator OpenAI thinks, which is why it is working on a way to ‘watermark’ AI-generated content. In a lecture at the University of Texas at Austin, computer science professor Scott Aaronson, currently a guest researcher at OpenAI, revealed that OpenAI is developing a tool for ‘statistically watermarking the outputs of a text [AI system].'”

Columbia News: What Is the State of Data Science Today?. “In recent years, the field of data science has exploded into the mainstream, and into our daily lives. Data science now touches nearly every aspect of society and affects how governments, the private sector, the healthcare profession, and many other vital sectors operate.”

Engadget: DeepMind created an AI tool that can help generate rough film and stage scripts. “Have you ever thought up an idea for a movie or play that you just know will be a smash hit, but haven’t gotten around to writing the script? Alphabet’s DeepMind has built an AI tool that can help get you started.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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December 16, 2022 at 01:26AM
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National Security Archive, Massachusetts Law Enforcement, Sports History, More: Thursday ResearchBuzz, December 15, 2022

National Security Archive, Massachusetts Law Enforcement, Sports History, More: Thursday ResearchBuzz, December 15, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

National Security Archive: Archive Launches Newly Designed Russian Pages. “Today, the National Security Archive relaunched its platform of Russian-language primary sources featuring a new search engine that allows researchers to perform full-text searches of thousands of documents in Russian and a fresh design that makes the pages easier to read on mobile devices. The updated pages also include a newly published collection of correspondence between presidents Bill Clinton and Boris Yeltsin and updates to several existing document collections retrieved from Russian archives.”

New England Cable News: Mass. POST Commission Police Officer Database Unveiled. “The Peace Officer Standards and Training (POST) Commission announced Monday that it has released a list of certified law enforcement officers. This first iteration of the database includes information on 8,225 officers with last names A-H and 1,094 officers who have graduated from academies since Dec. 1, 2021. There are 9,322 records contributed from 431 different agencies…. Users can search for officers by name.”

EVENTS

UK Web Archiving Blog: Examining sports history through digitised & born digital resources. “The Irish Sporting Lives workshop and symposium took place at the Ulster University campus in Belfast from 11-12 November 2022. Day one took the form of a half day workshop aimed at PhD/ECR researchers. It focused both on imparting knowledge about how to research historical figures and how to write sporting biographies.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Bing Blogs: HO HO HO! Microsoft and Bing Maps help NORAD track Santa!. “Working with Cesium, a platform for developers to build web-based 3D map apps, NORAD has built a 3D tracker that displays Santa’s whereabouts. The 3D tracker app uses Bing Maps satellite imagery to give a realistic texture to the 3D globe rendered by the CesiumJS library.”

PC World: Finally! Windows Snipping Tool will add screen recording. “The Windows Snipping Tool app is finally adding a screen recorder feature—a tool that PCWorld may care more about than you, honestly.”

USEFUL STUFF

TechCrunch: ShareGPT lets you easily share your ChatGPT conversations. “ShareGPT captures the full conversation with ChatGPT and generates a URL to share it with others. So instead of taking multiple screenshots of the conversation with the AI chatbot, you can directly share the URL… Once you have installed the Chrome extension, head to the ChatGPT website and kickstart the conversation with the bot.”

Make Tech Easier: 8 of the Most Useful Google Sheets Formulas. “Thanks to Google Sheets formulas, you can do far more than just perform general sorts or add columns. The most useful formulas go beyond adding, counting, and giving you averages, though all of those are useful too. Imagine if you could easily import just the data you needed into another spreadsheet or only count cells that match specific criteria. That’s just the start of what’s possible.”

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

ZDNet: Year-end recaps personify our unconscious love for social media–and numbers. “At the core of our desire to share our music taste with others is also a desire to fit in and find a community. When I first started college, someone told me to wear band tees because that was an easy way to find people who shared a common interest. The same concept applies to sharing your music preferences online with others.”

Museums Association: Project launched to create UK-wide digital collections database. “A plan to hugely improve access to digital collections data has been unveiled by Art UK, Collections Trust and the University of Leicester. The partnership is aiming is to create digital infrastructure that will pool millions of object records and share them for use by the public and researchers. The Museum Data Service will be launched in autumn 2023.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

BBC: Sam Bankman-Fried: FTX founder arrested in Bahamas. “Sam Bankman-Fried, founder of the collapsed cryptocurrency exchange FTX, has been arrested in The Bahamas, the country’s attorney general has said. He is scheduled to appear on Tuesday in a magistrates’ court in the Caribbean country’s capital, Nassau.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Daily Beast: Gen Z Is Ready to Torpedo Social Media’s Echo Chambers. “Our social media feeds are complex and infinite. They are online spaces that are curated by algorithm data that predict what we like. By tracking our every move, social media will seamlessly find and give us content that is, as TikTok so presciently states, ‘for you.’ It seems that our decision to double tap or swipe up has bigger consequences than we think. And members of Gen Z, myself included, are anxious to see social media structures dismantled and reformed into something that we don’t have to fear.”

Open Access Government: Reading & deciphering ancient writing systems with AI. “Shai Gordin, Senior Lecturer at Digital Pasts Lab, Ariel University in Israel, provides intriguing insights about reading & deciphering ancient writing systems using AI.” Lots of links. Good morning, Internet…

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December 15, 2022 at 06:32PM
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Wednesday, December 14, 2022

England Food Insecurity, Google Chrome, Twitter, More: Wednesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 14, 2022

England Food Insecurity, Google Chrome, Twitter, More: Wednesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 14, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

University of Southampton: New Index shows regions in the north have higher risk of food insecurity. “The Index was developed for more than 30,000 neighbourhoods across England with populations between 1,000 to 3,000 people. The index calculates food insecurity risk for all areas based on benefits claimants and low-income at a household level, as well as data on mental health and adult educational attainment.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Ars Technica: Chrome’s “Manifest V3” plan to limit ad-blocking extensions is delayed. “The first steps toward winding down Manifest V2 were supposed to start January 2023, but as 9to5Google first spotted, Google now says it delayed the mandatory switch to Manifest V3 and won’t even have a new timeline for a V2 shutdown ready until March.”

Wall Street Journal: Twitter’s Advertising Truth Hurts. “Activity on Twitter’s ad manager, a subdomain of Twitter’s ad platform sites that specifically hosts those creating or monitoring ad campaigns, declined nearly 74% in October from a year earlier, according to [Similarweb’s] data. In November, visits fell 85% on the same basis—the largest ad traffic decline since Twitter’s change of hands.”

USEFUL STUFF

How-To Geek: How to Access .onion Sites (Also Known as Tor Hidden Services). “Website addresses that end in ‘.onion’ aren’t like normal domain names, and you can’t access them with a normal web browser. Addresses that end with “.onion” point to Tor hidden services on the ‘deep web’.” The article notes that despite the name, onion sites can be less than savory and therefore shouldn’t be browsed, just accessed with a specific destination in mind.

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

The Atlantic: Crypto Was Always Smoke and Mirrors. “The world of cryptocurrency is rich with eccentric characters and anonymous Twitter personalities. So perhaps it shouldn’t be a surprise that one of the early figures who called attention to the problems with Sam Bankman-Fried’s cryptocurrency exchange, FTX, is a 30-year-old Michigan psychiatrist who investigates financial crimes as a hobby. James Block, who runs a crypto newsletter called Dirty Bubble Media, has gotten overlooked in the swift and spectacular collapse of FTX.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Ars Technica: Effective, fast, and unrecoverable: Wiper malware is popping up everywhere. “Over the past year, a flurry of destructive wiper malware from no fewer than nine families has appeared. In the past week, researchers cataloged at least two more, both exhibiting advanced codebases designed to inflict maximum damage.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Newswise: Internet treatment for anger works. “Problems with managing anger can have severe consequences for the afflicted individual and their loved ones. A new study from the Centre for Psychiatry Research at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden shows that four weeks of therapy delivered over the internet can help people with anger and aggression. The results have been published in the Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology.” The researchers noted that contrary to many studies, it was very easy for them to get volunteers for this study.

Google Blog: Using new technology and old books to combat disease. “Hundreds of millions of people are affected by insect-borne diseases every year, and climate change is only making the problem worse. Increases in temperature and rainfall have expanded the range of insects, including ticks and mosquitos, contributing to outbreaks of diseases such as dengue fever, lyme disease and malaria. Where can humanity find answers to the newest challenges? One idea: old books.”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

The Guardian: What was Dracula really like? 550-year-old clue to life of Vlad the Impaler emerges. “On a dark and stormy night in May this year, exactly 125 years to the day that Bram Stoker published the definitive vampire novel, two people pored over a document more than 500 years old in a room in Transylvania – signed by Dracula himself. Gleb and Svetlana Zilberstein’s mission? To extract genetic material from the letters written by Vlad Dracula – the historical inspiration for Stoker’s vampiric count – left there by his sweat, fingerprints and saliva.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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December 15, 2022 at 01:47AM
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Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts, UK Warm Spaces, Renovated Freerice, More: Wednesday ResearchBuzz, December 14, 2022

Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts, UK Warm Spaces, Renovated Freerice, More: Wednesday ResearchBuzz, December 14, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

British Library Blog: From Julian of Norwich to Eleanor Cobham: more magnificent manuscripts online. “Readers of this Blog may know about out ambitious project to digitise a selection of manuscripts, rolls and charters connected with Medieval and Renaissance Women. Here we reveal another ten volumes that are now available online, including important literary manuscripts, a guide for female recluses, obituary calendars, and a volume with its own embroidered bookbinding.”

Belfast Telegraph: Church IT developer creates online warm bank map to help during ‘desperate time’. “An IT developer from Norwich has created a website listing warm banks across the UK in an attempt to help people tackle the ‘desperate’ cost-of-living crisis and stay warm this winter.”

World Food Programme: Meet Freerice: The World Food Programme’s new Youth Hub. “The new Freerice aims to empower and engage young people to learn more about topics like hunger, sustainability and gender equality. It provides them resources and ideas on how to become advocates in their communities.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

CNET: Twitter Community Notes Go Global to Collaboratively Add Context to Tweets. “Twitter’s Community Notes feature is rolling out globally, the company said Saturday. The new feature is a way for people to ‘collaboratively add context’ to potentially misleading tweets.”

Engadget: Discord users can soon verify their identities with linked accounts. “Discord is expanding on Connections, a feature that allows users to show what music they’re listening to (among other things), by providing a way for folks to verify their identity using accounts on other platforms. Starting in the next few weeks, admins will be able to offer dedicated server roles to users who have authenticated profiles with accounts elsewhere.”

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

ABC News (Australia): National Gallery of Australia chair projects $265 million shortfall over 10 years, jobs could go. “The National Gallery of Australia (NGA) may have to cut up to half its staff if the national institution’s funding isn’t increased by June of next year, independent senator David Pocock says.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Globe Echo: Japan, Paradise Of Lost And Found. “If you misplace your wallet, smartphone, umbrella or something else in Japan, you have a good chance of being found. To further improve the management of the lost property system, the National Police Agency is in the process of developing a database covering the entire Archipelago – until now research has been done at the level of each department. Bringing together information on the depositions of lost objects on a national level, this new tool will make it possible to locate in a few minutes if it has been found.”

CNN: Former top Twitter official forced to leave home due to threats amid ‘Twitter Files’ release. “Twitter’s former head of trust and safety has fled his home due to an escalation in threats resulting from Elon Musk’s campaign of criticism against him, a person familiar with the matter told CNN on Monday.”

Bleeping Computer: Uber suffers new data breach after attack on vendor, info leaked online. “Uber has suffered a new data breach after a threat actor leaked employee email addresses, corporate reports, and IT asset information stolen from a third-party vendor in a cybersecurity incident.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Duke Health: Top IUD TikTok Videos Often Portray Painful Experiences, Healthcare Mistrust. “Popular TikTok videos related to intrauterine devices (IUDs) tend to depict negative patient experiences related to pain, while some videos conveyed unreliable information about the contraceptive devices.”

MIT News: An automated way to assemble thousands of objects. “…researchers from MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL), Autodesk Research, and Texas A&M University came up with a method to automatically assemble products that’s accurate, efficient, and generalizable to a wide range of complex real-world assemblies. Their algorithm efficiently determines the order for multipart assembly, and then searches for a physically realistic motion path for each step.”

University of Virginia: Researchers Angling To Make ‘Fish-ial’ Recognition Software a Reality. “Facial recognition can identify people in a crowd. Can the same be done for fish in a river with ‘fish-ial’ recognition software? University of Virginia data scientist Sheng Li is determined to find out. In collaboration with the U.S. Geological Survey, which has provided a five-year grant, Li and his two research assistants are training a deep-learning algorithm to recognize nuances in individual fishes’ faces and scale patterns.” Good morning, Internet…

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December 14, 2022 at 06:28PM
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Tuesday, December 13, 2022

Global Elections in the Digital Era, Boot Sticks, Sleep Apps, More: Tuesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 13, 2022

Global Elections in the Digital Era, Boot Sticks, Sleep Apps, More: Tuesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 13, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

University of Texas at Austin: ‘Information and Elections in the Digital Era’: Knight Center and UNESCO launch self-directed online course in four languages. “A multilingual course in English, French, Portuguese and Spanish that looks at the impact of the digital era on global elections is now available to take at any time, from anywhere around the world.”

USEFUL STUFF

How-To Geek: This Tool Can Boot Multiple OSes From a USB Drive. “Booting a PC into a Windows installer, Linux distribution, or other CD/USB image usually requires wiping a USB drive and overwriting it with one image at a time. That means using several USB drives if you want to keep around install/recovery images for multiple operating systems. Ventoy solves this problem with a multi-boot setup — once it is installed on a USB drive, you can copy as many ISO images as you want to a single flash drive using any file manager, and then select the one you want at startup.”

MakeUseOf: The Best Sleep Apps for Tracking and Improving Sleep. “If you’re reading this, there’s a good chance you’re desperate for better sleep, too. But can mobile apps really help you sleep better? Under the right circumstances, yes they can. Let’s look at the three types of apps that can help you get better sleep: sleep tracker apps, blue light filter apps, and sleep meditation apps.”

Online Journalism Blog: How to: create a data news diary. “One of the most basic sources of story ideas for a journalist is a news diary listing forthcoming newsworthy events. For the journalist looking for ideas in data, having forthcoming data releases in your diary can be especially useful. Here is a quick guide preparing your own data news diary.”

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

Mashable: An ode to 2022, the last ‘normal’ year on Twitter . “…even though Twitter is ending 2022 in a substantially worse place than it was at the start of the year, there was still a lot to celebrate. For the most part, 2022 was the last ‘normal’ year on Twitter and that entailed a whole lot of incredible memes, massive cultural moments, and just good old-fashioned gags, riffs, and japes. It’s not possible to fit everything into one article, but here are just a few of our favorite Twitter bits from the last year before things got totally out of control.”

Nieman Journalism Lab: TikTok personality journalists continue to rise. “Younger audiences aren’t opening up a physical newspaper or turning on the 7 p.m. news (sorry). They’re scrolling on Twitter, Instagram, or TikTok. And after seeing the success of The Washington Post and Planet Money‘s TikToks, other outlets are going to want in. But it won’t just be brand accounts posting these TikToks — it’ll be reporters using their own accounts to explain their reporting.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Reuters: North Korean hackers exploited Seoul Halloween tragedy to distribute malware, Google says. “North Korean government-backed hackers referenced the deadly Halloween crush in Seoul to distribute malware to users in South Korea, Google’s Threat Analysis group said in a report.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

The Conversation: Why we need open-source science innovation — not patents and paywalls. “As we prepare to invest money to prevent the next global pandemic and find solutions to many other problems, science funders have a large opportunity to move towards open science and more research collaboration by offering open-source endowed chairs. In these research positions, professors agree to ensure all of their writing is distributed via open access — and they release all of their intellectual property in the public domain or under appropriate open-source licences.”

Esquire: How to Unfriend Your Dead Brother. “As months passed, I attempted to accept Andrew’s death, but his digital self refused to. By all accounts—literally—he lived on. When did technology become the guy who casually brings up traumatic events without noticing he’s crippling you?”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

New York Times: They’re Taking Jigsaws to Infinity and Beyond. “Ms. Rosenkrantz and Mr. Louis-Rosenberg are algorithmic artists who make laser-cut wooden jigsaw puzzles — among other curios — at their design studio, Nervous System, in Palenville, N.Y. Inspired by how shapes and forms emerge in nature, they write custom software to ‘grow’ intertwining puzzle pieces. Their signature puzzle cuts have names like dendrite, amoeba, maze and wave.” Good morning, Internet…

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December 14, 2022 at 01:04AM
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Denmark Energy Use, Curationist, Learning Algebra, More: Tuesday ResearchBuzz, December 13, 2022

Denmark Energy Use, Curationist, Learning Algebra, More: Tuesday ResearchBuzz, December 13, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Technical University of Denmark: Energy database creating the basis for the green transition. “Energydata.dk collects data from a number of different energy sector stakeholders. The database collects this real-time data before analysing it and making it available to businesses and researchers working to develop new solutions for the energy systems of the future.”

Creative Commons: Reimagine Open Culture with the Newly Relaunched Curationist.org. “Exciting news — an initiative of the MHz Foundation, Curationist.org, a free-to-use platform that connects users to over 4.4 million digital artworks and cultural objects, recently relaunched with some amazing new features.”

Wolfram Blog: Learn Algebra from the Ground Up with Wolfram Language. “This course introduces students to basic algebraic terminology and rules, then uses these ideas to explore everything from linear equations to systems of inequalities to quadratic equations. Along the way, powerful Wolfram Language functions are used to verify, simplify and visualize all subjects of discussion.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Jamaica Observer: RGD adds genealogical research tool to list of products, services. “The Outtamany Search, formerly known as Genealogical Research, provides useful information on a family’s history, factual evidence on the cause (s) of death through generations, and can identify the origin of a family or discover unknown family members. The upgraded service includes more in-depth research reports with a list of vital events, births, marriages, deaths, customised family trees and ancestral causes of death.” RGD is Registrar General’s Department. This is a government service.

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

Genealogy’s Star: Comments on the limitations of online genealogical research. “Genealogists spend much of their lives looking for records whether online or otherwise. But because so many valuable genealogical records are now found online, newer genealogists have no idea what to do when they can’t seem to find a digital copy of some record they think exists.”

Newsday: Long Beach’s 113-year-old museum in need of urgent repair, historical society says. “The Long Beach Historical and Preservation Society faces a funding gap that could cause the organization to lose its 113-year-old museum unless it raises the money needed to repair and restore the deteriorating facility. The coronavirus pandemic’s effect on fundraising events — like the society’s annual craft fair — hobbled the organization’s finances and caused it to lose out on some $200,000, said society co-president Karen Adamo. Maintaining the museum costs about $70,000 annually, she said.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

TorrentFreak: Google Reveals Surge in Questionable Removal Requests From Russian Government. “Russia has sent a record number of takedown requests to Google in the first half of this year. In the past, copyright infringement was the most cited reason for action but that has been replaced by ‘national security’, currently a top priority for Russia. Google, however, is wary of overbroad censorship and hasn’t complied with most requests.”

California Department of Justice: Attorney General Bonta Urges U.S. Supreme Court to Allow Social Media Companies to be Held Liable for Recommending Harmful Third-Party Content, Narrow Interpretation of Communications Decency Act. “California Attorney General Rob Bonta, alongside a bipartisan coalition of attorneys general, filed an amicus brief in Gonzalez v. Google urging the U.S. Supreme Court to interpret section 230 of the Communications Decency Act to allow social media companies to be held liable when they use algorithms to make targeted recommendations of harmful third-party content.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

MIT News: MIT researchers use quantum computing to observe entanglement. “For the first time, researchers at MIT, Caltech, Harvard University, and elsewhere sent quantum information across a quantum system in what could be understood as traversing a wormhole. Though this experiment didn’t create a disruption of physical space and time in the way we might understand the term ‘wormhole’ from science fiction, calculations from the experiment showed that qubits traveled from one system of entangled particles to another in a model of gravity.”

PennState: Researchers propose methods for automatic detection of doxing . “To date, the research team has only studied Twitter, where their novel proposed approach uses machine learning to differentiate which tweet containing personally identifiable information is maliciously shared rather than self-disclosed. They have identified an approach that was able to automatically detect doxing on Twitter with over 96% accuracy, which could help the platform — and eventually other social media platforms — more quickly and easily identify true cases of doxing.”

New York Times: The New Chat Bots Could Change the World. Can You Trust Them?. “After the release of ChatGPT — which has been used by more than a million people — many experts believe these new chat bots are poised to reinvent or even replace internet search engines like Google and Bing.” I have Feelings about this but the succinct version is I disagree.

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

Ars Technica: Fifty years later, remastered images reveal Apollo 17 in stunning clarity. “Earlier this year, a British photographer named Andy Saunders published a book titled Apollo Remastered, which showcases 400 photos from the Apollo missions to the Moon. Astronauts took about 20,000 images on Hasselblad cameras during the Apollo program…. To mark the historic launch of Apollo 17, Saunders shared eight high-resolution images from his book with Ars, along with captions.” Good morning, Internet…

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December 13, 2022 at 06:27PM
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