Monday, April 3, 2023

Organize Your Biographical Web Searches With Biography Buckets

Organize Your Biographical Web Searches With Biography Buckets
By ResearchBuzz

I spoke to the folks at Apra Wisconsin last week. The topic was web search with a focus on people search.I walked them through a dozen of my Search Gizmos. (There are almost 50 at this point so I can’t do a whole site tour in an hour.)

Afterwards during Q&A someone asked if I had a Gizmo where they could put in a bunch of biographical information about someone and do a search. For example, where they lived, where they went to school, and so on.

I didn’t have such a Gizmo, but I found the question fascinating because they labeled the search terms: this one is birthplace, this one is education. I don’t do that because I’m so used to searching Google and other general search engines and they don’t accommodate labeling parts of queries – for the most part a search term is a search term. You can’t, for example, use a birthplace: syntax on Google News. But what if there was some other way we could implement biography-based search terms like this with defined boundaries so they didn’t overwhelm a search with too many terms and make it fail?

Every physical aspect of reality can be viewed in relation to date and location. Here we all are, observable in time and space. (Hopefully not TOO observable.) Search engines sometimes have location-oriented search tools but they’re not precise enough for our requirements. On the other hand, a number of search resources offer date-based searching. So why not assign time spans to different biographical events (or even keywords) and build searches that way?

So I made Biography Buckets! ( https://searchgizmos.com/buckets/ )

Screenshot from 2023-04-01 12-01-47

 

Biography Buckets lets you specify a bunch of biographical events with time spans and organize them into date-based searches. Here’s how it works.

Using Biography Buckets

First, choose the person you want to search for and the resource you want to search. Your options: Google News, Google Scholar, Google Books (Magazines Only), Google Books (Newspapers Only), Twitter, Reddit (via SocialGrep) and Newspapers.com. Twitter, Reddit, and to a lesser extent Google News are only suitable for searches spanning ~2010 and later.

Screenshot-from-2023-04-01-11-29-50

Then list the search terms you want to include in your search for this person. These terms can include where they went to school, spouses, names of notable works, where they lived, etc. You can even include generic terms that are frequently associated with the person, like “vaccine” in this example.

Screenshot-from-2023-04-01-11-34-50

Finally, choose the time spans that you want to run searches for and click the “Generate Search URLs” button. These are the time spans that your search resource of choice will use in building its queries. Experiment with different span lengths — in the case of Jonas Salk, for example, maybe you do a thirty-year search to cover his early life, do a somewhat shorter search that spans the time between his education and the polio vaccine, do a very short two-year search focused on the vaccine era, etc.

Screenshot-from-2023-04-01-11-37-40

Biography Buckets will generate the search links with each date-bounded search term going in its appropriate time span(s) query along with the name of the person for whom you’re searching. Click on the link and it’ll open in a new tab.

Screenshot-from-2023-04-01-11-42-51


April 3, 2023 at 06:46PM
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Early 20th Century Japan, Sephardic Judaism, Library of Congress, More: Monday ResearchBuzz, April 3, 2023

Early 20th Century Japan, Sephardic Judaism, Library of Congress, More: Monday ResearchBuzz, April 3, 2023
By ResearchBuzz

SEARCH GIZMO OF THE DAY: Biography Buckets
I spoke to Apra Wisconsin last week, and one of the participants asked about a tool to do a general biographical search when you have various types of information. It was a great question so I made Biography Buckets. It organizes time-labeled events into date-based searches for one of seven different search resources.

NEW RESOURCES

NHK World-Japan: New website features collection of films documenting Japan in early 20th century. “Archivists in Japan have launched a website featuring a collection of news and documentary films from the early 20th century. The National Film Archive of Japan and the National Institute of Informatics opened the website on Friday. ‘Film IS a Document: NFAJ Historic Film Portal’ offers a lineup of 87 films produced from 1904 to 1937.” I was not able to find the site directly but it looks like the video is being uploaded to YouTube.

Jewish News Syndicate: National Library of Israel expands Sephardic heritage, Spanish-language offerings. “NLI has launched a webpage dedicated to the Jewish Expulsion from Spain. The site presents items from its collection of pre-and post-expulsion Sephardic manuscripts, early printed books, Ladino materials, poetry and prayer, and other oral documentation.”

EVENTS

Library of Congress: Library of Congress Launches Transcription Campaign for Rarely Seen Post-Civil War Petition from Black South Carolina Residents Seeking Equal Rights. “The Library of Congress hosted a special display and press conference to announce a new transcription campaign seeking to learn more about the signers of a rarely seen 1865 petition by Black residents in South Carolina calling for equal rights.”

USEFUL STUFF

Make Tech Easier: 5 of the Best Steganography Tools in Linux. “Steganography is the art and process of putting one type of information inside another in an attempt to hide it. This is often done in situations where an individual wants to preserve secret information inside normal objects. This guide shows five of the best steganography tools currently available in Linux. It also shows you how you can hide your first message using these utilities.”

Digital Inspiration: Automating the Creation of Multiple Folders in Google Drive. “A teacher may want to create folders in Google Drive for each of their students and share those folders with the students. This can be a tedious task if you have a large number of students but there’s a way to automate the process – you may either use an add-on or write an Apps Script to generate the folder structure.”

MakeUseOf: 6 Best Sites for Cheat Sheets, Shortcuts, and Quick Reference Cards. “The internet loves making cheat sheets for everything from programming languages to recipes and cooking ratios. These websites create their own from scratch or collect the best of the internet’s advice to give you easy access to shortcuts and quick reference cards.”

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

Indian Express: Ignored Dutch archives hold key to understanding colonial history of Kerala . “The Cosmos Malabaricus, which in Latin means the Malabar world, and is a spinoff from the Hortus Malabaricus, a 17th century Indo-Dutch treatise on the flora of the Malabar region, promises to continue with the tradition of training Indian historians to access the Dutch archives.”

WIRED: Review: We Put ChatGPT, Bing Chat, and Bard to the Test. “For the past three decades, when we’ve browsed the web or used a search engine, we’ve typed in bits of data and received mostly static answers in response. It’s been a fairly reliable relationship of input-output, one that’s grown more complex as advanced artificial intelligence—and data monetization schemes—have entered the chat. Now, the next wave of generative AI is enabling a new paradigm: computer interactions that feel more like human chats.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

New York Times: ‘Thousands of Dollars for Something I Didn’t Do’. “Because of a bad facial recognition match and other hidden technology, Randal Reid spent nearly a week in jail, falsely accused of stealing purses in a state he said he had never even visited.”

CNN: Arkansas sues TikTok, ByteDance and Meta over mental health claims. “The state of Arkansas has sued TikTok, its parent ByteDance, and Facebook-parent Meta over claims the companies’ products are harmful to users, in the latest effort by public officials to take social media companies to court over mental-health and privacy concerns.”

Carnegie Mellon University: New tool helps mobile app developers create more accurate iOS privacy labels. “After installing the tool, developers are asked to load their apps’ static code. The code remains on their machine and is never shared with anyone. Privacy Label Wiz then analyzes the code to identify likely data collection and use practices… The wizard also looks at whether sensitive data is shared with third parties such as advertisers or marketing companies, and more generally looks for other practices developers need to disclose in their iOS privacy labels.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

University at Buffalo: UB receives $500,000 Mellon Foundation grant to develop Haudenosaunee Archive, Resource and Knowledge Portal. “The University at Buffalo College of Arts and Sciences has received a $500,000 grant from the Mellon Foundation to support the implementation of an indispensable community-driven digital resource for the collection, preservation and dissemination of Indigenous research, teaching and learning.” 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. Check out Search Gizmos when you have a minute. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you.



April 3, 2023 at 05:30PM
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Sunday, April 2, 2023

Dallas Police Use of Force, WordPress, Public Domain Game Jam, More: Sunday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, April 2, 2023

Dallas Police Use of Force, WordPress, Public Domain Game Jam, More: Sunday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, April 2, 2023
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

WFAA: ‘We’re trying to be as transparent at possible’: Dallas Police launches new use of force database. “The interactive database will provide details on use of force cases dating back to 2014. The public will find it breaks down data into the subject’s gender, race, age, area the incidents happened and other categories.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

WordPress: WordPress 6.2 “Dolphy”. “This latest version of WordPress reimagines your site editing experience, introduces more ways to style your site, and offers a new distraction-free way to write. Discover improvements that give you more control and freedom to express your creative vision. There’s something for everyone, whether you’re a content creator, developer, site builder, or designer.”

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

Techdirt: Game Jam Winner Spotlight: Escape From 1927. “The first three Hardy Boys novels were some of the higher-profile works to enter the public domain this year, and it’s a bit surprising that we didn’t get more entries based on the iconic characters. But that void is capably filled by Escape From 1927, which turns the first book (The Tower Treasure) into a fully realized point-and-click adventure/hidden object game.”

Engadget: Watch us try to break Google Bard and Bing AI. “In our test, we asked both chatbots a series of questions to see which is better at delivering facts, replacing me at my job and participating in existential debates. We also looked at their speed, transparency and how likely they were to break if we started to push its buttons by being rude or flirty.” Video. The only captions I saw were auto-generated. They weren’t awful but did have errors.

WIRED: How a Major Toy Company Kept 4chan Online. “TOXIC IMAGE BOARD 4chan has managed to stay online for the past seven years—amid boycotts and advertiser flight, after being implicated in several mass shootings, even as it was identified as a source of the conspiracy theories that inspired the January 6 insurrection—thanks, in part, to a $2.4 million investment from a major Japanese toy company.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Reuters: Humans vs. machines: the fight to copyright AI art. “Last year, Kris Kashtanova typed instructions for a graphic novel into a new artificial-intelligence program and touched off a high-stakes debate over who created the artwork: a human or an algorithm.”

Amnesty International: Amnesty International uncovers new hacking campaign linked to mercenary spyware company. “Amnesty International is not naming the company while the Security Lab continues to track and investigate its activity. However, the attack showed all the hallmarks of an advanced spyware campaign developed by a commercial cyber-surveillance company and sold to governments hackers to carry out targeted spyware attacks.”

US Attorney’s Office: Social Media Influencer Douglass Mackey Convicted of Election Interference in 2016 Presidential Race. “As proven at trial, between September 2016 and November 2016, Mackey conspired with other influential Twitter users and with members of private online groups to use social media platforms, including Twitter, to disseminate fraudulent messages that encouraged supporters of presidential candidate Hillary Clinton to ‘vote’ via text message or social media which, in reality, was legally invalid.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

The Conversation: Australia’s cultural institutions are especially vulnerable to efficiency dividends: looking back at 35 years of cuts. “In January the Albanese government launched a new arts policy, Revive. Among its measures was a commitment to exempt Australia’s seven national performing arts training organisations from the efficiency dividend. The directors of Australia’s national cultural organisations in the galleries, libraries, archives and museums (GLAM) sector might well have looked on in envy, but also in hope. Revive did not deal with their problems, but Arts Minister Tony Burke does recognise they are in deep trouble.”

Yale Daily News: Not All Games Go to Heaven. “To preserve an old console’s library would simply entail preserving a collection of physical media. Now, as consoles like the 3DS, Wii, and Playstation 3 — which helped to launch an era of digital gaming libraries — lose internet functionality and developer support, the question of preservation has become a question of survival.” 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. Check out Search Gizmos when you have a minute. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you.



April 3, 2023 at 12:28AM
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Early Baseball Publications, NYC Child Care, Google Bard, More: Sunday ResearchBuzz, April 2, 2023

Early Baseball Publications, NYC Child Care, Google Bard, More: Sunday ResearchBuzz, April 2, 2023
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Library of Congress: Baseball Opening Day, and the Library Adds MLB History Online. “To celebrate the start of the 2023 season, the Library is pleased to announce a new digital collection: Early Baseball Publications. The collection, which will grow over time, provides full-text digitized access to more than 120 early baseball publications.”

City of New York: Mayor Adams Launches First Phase of MyCity Portal to Easily Help New Yorkers Check Eligibility, Apply For, and Track City Services and Benefits. “Beginning today, MyCity users will be able to easily check eligibility, apply for, and track services and benefits in the city’s 10 most common languages, as well as securely save their information and documentation for future applications as they apply for child care.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Ars Technica: Google Bard gets better at homework with improved math and logic capabilities. “Google Bard is getting a little smarter today with the addition of math and logic capabilities. Google employee Jack Krawczyk announced the change on Twitter, saying, ‘Now Bard will better understand and respond to your prompts for multi-step word and math problems, with coding coming soon.'”

Washington Post: The Post ruins April Fools’ Day, 2023 edition. “As a public service, we are debunking every brand- or celebrity-related April Fools’ prank we can find today in the hopes that no one is tricked against their will.” They missed the cute one that Georgia Tech did about changing the frequency of its steam whistle..

USEFUL STUFF

ReviewGeek: What Is Generative AI?. “In the last few months, apps using Generative AI exploded onto the market. AI photo app Lensa and OpenAI’s chatbot, ChatGPT, made a huge splash because they make high-quality text and images on demand. Now Microsoft and Google are playing catchup. But what is Generative AI, and how does it work?” Extensive explainer.

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

Search Engine Land: Should you block ChatGPT’s web browser plugin from accessing your website?. “Pretty soon, ChatGPT will be able to feed in content from third-party websites for the AI to summarize or manipulate – the same way Bing is doing. Many third-party plugins and tools can already scrape content from a website, feed it into a prompt to the OpenAI API, and summarize or manipulate that text. However, with an official web browser plugin, this usage is about to increase drastically.”

dotLA: Meet the Creator Economy’s Version of LinkedIn. “LinkedIn hasn’t caught on with Gen Z—in fact, 96% rarely use their existing account. Considering 25% of young people want to be full-time content creators and most influencers aren’t active on LinkedIn, traditional networking sites aren’t likely to meet these needs. Enter CreatorLand.”

GovTech: CSUCI Professor Uses $146K Grant to Archive Computer Games. “CSUCI computer science professors Eric Kaltman and Joseph Osborn are using emulators to develop a digital archive for old computer games, giving scholars the ability to bookmark and access specific moments in games.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

WESH: Florida principal who sent $100K to scammer posing as Elon Musk says she was ‘groomed’ . “A principal of a charter school in Volusia County resigned after writing a $100,000 check to an internet scammer posing as Elon Musk.”

Engadget: Court rules Elon Musk broke federal labor law with 2018 tweet. “Elon Musk broke US labor law in 2018 when he tweeted Tesla factory workers would forgo stock options if they chose to unionize, according to a federal appeals court. On Friday, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, in a decision spotted by Business Insider, upheld a National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) ruling that found Musk made unlawful threats around employee compensation.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

The Next Web: Opinion: The AI pope coat is the shape of hyperreality to come. “If you were on social media at any point over the past weekend, you would have seen the image. And — if you were anything like me and seemingly millions of other people — you didn’t immediately realise it was AI-generated. In history books, this will likely go down as the first time the public was fooled en-masse by an AI-generated image. But this is just the beginning, a marker of times to come.”

Computer Weekly: Mounting Russian disinformation campaign targeting Arab world. “The UK’s Centre for Information Resilience (CIR) has warned of a mounting Russia-backed disinformation campaign targeting Arabic speakers in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), spreading propaganda and false narratives to win over hearts and minds in its war on Ukraine.” 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. Check out Search Gizmos when you have a minute. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you.



April 2, 2023 at 05:29PM
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Friday, March 31, 2023

Digital Library of Georgia, Twitter, Google Drive, More: Friday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, March 31, 2023

Digital Library of Georgia, Twitter, Google Drive, More: Friday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, March 31, 2023
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Digital Library of Georgia: Forthcoming Newspapers – Spring 2023. “This year, the Digital Library of Georgia will be adding a variety of new newspaper titles to the Georgia Historic Newspapers (GHN) website (https://gahistoricnewspapers.galileo.usg.edu/). Below is the list of titles currently slated to be added to GHN in the Spring and Summer of 2023.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

New York Times: Twitter’s Blue Check Apocalypse Is Upon Us. Here’s What to Know.. “For those of you who primarily use Twitter to follow celebrities and news sites, this policy change will affect what you see and read on the service. You may see fewer tweets from accounts you care about in your timeline, for instance, because individuals who choose not to pay for Twitter Blue will become less visible on the site.”

The Verge: Twitter takes its algorithm ‘open-source,’ as Elon Musk promised. “Twitter has released the code that chooses which tweets show up on your timeline to GitHub and has put out a blog post explaining the decision. It breaks down what the algorithm looks at when determining which tweets to feature in the For You timeline and how it ranks and filters them.” As you might imagine, Jane Manchun Wong is already on the case…

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

Ars Technica: Google Drive does a surprise rollout of file limits, locking out some users. “Google apparently decided to put a hard limit on the number of files you’re allowed to have on one Google Drive account. Google rolled out this file limit without warning anyone it would happen. Users over the limit found themselves suddenly locked out of new file uploads, and it was up to them to figure out what was going wrong.”

University of Texas at Austin: Harry Ransom Center Acquires Archive of Poet James Fenton. “The archive of the English poet, journalist and literary critic James Fenton is coming to the Harry Ransom Center at The University of Texas at Austin. Fenton’s body of work traces the political upheavals of our time, including the regime of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the suppression of political protest in China’s Tiananmen Square, and Northern Ireland’s fratricidal bloodletting.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Washington Post: U.S. published Social Security numbers of 1,900 White House visitors in error. “The United States government erroneously shared the Social Security numbers of more than 1,900 people online earlier this year, part of a data breach that occurred during the publication of the Jan. 6 select committee report, according to a letter reviewed by The Washington Post.”

BBC: ChatGPT banned in Italy over privacy concerns. “Italy has become the first Western country to block advanced chatbot ChatGPT. The Italian data-protection authority said there were privacy concerns relating to the model, which was created by US start-up OpenAI and is backed by Microsoft.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Washington University in St. Louis: Making Internet of Things more secure. “Shantanu Chakrabartty’s lab demonstrates a quantum device for authentication in adversarial wireless environments.”

CoinTelegraph: AI has a role to play in detecting fake NFTs. “Beyond all the good a permissionless internet promises, it also makes it convenient for anyone to freely mint pirated nonfungible tokens (NFTs). There are in fact over 90 million fake copies of NFTs. Because in a permissionless system, what’s to stop bad actors from creating copymints to scam unsuspecting users or damage a brand’s reputation?” 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. Check out Search Gizmos when you have a minute. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you.



April 1, 2023 at 01:34AM
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National Library of Estonia, Yosl and Chana Mlotek Yiddish Song Collection, Volcanoes on Venus, More: Friday ResearchBuzz, March 31, 2023

National Library of Estonia, Yosl and Chana Mlotek Yiddish Song Collection, Volcanoes on Venus, More: Friday ResearchBuzz, March 31, 2023
By ResearchBuzz

SEARCH GIZMO OF THE DAY: Super Edu Search.
Super Edu Search takes higher education institution information from the Department of Education and applies it to a Google search. Did you ever want to search the Web space of all the public universities in Indiana? Or all the HBCUs in the country? Or maybe all the Baptist institutions in Texas? Now you can. Requires Free Data.gov API key.

NEW RESOURCES

From the National Library of Estonia, and machine-translated from Estonian: The National Library’s DigiLabor helps to monetize cultural data. (Based on the rest of the article I don’t think that’s a great translation.) “On March 30, the Estonian National Library’s research portal DigiLabor started operating. Those interested can create new knowledge and values ​​from the datasets themselves or use the help of a library representative. The goal of the National Library’s DigiLab ( digilab.rara.ee ) is to help make the data held by libraries more digitally accessible and usable, to promote data valorization, research and innovation. The DigiLabor collection contains metadata of over 12 million newspaper articles and 70,000 books and 785,000 objects, but the datasets are constantly being supplemented. ”

Forward: The digitized ‘Yosl and Chana Mlotek Yiddish Song Collection’ is now live. “The Workers Circle has unveiled a long anticipated website: the digitization of 400 Yiddish songs, based on the popular out-of-print songbook series, Pearls of Yiddish Song, compiled and written by the late Yiddishist couple, Yosl and Chana Mlotek.”

Washington University in St. Louis: Scientists share ‘comprehensive’ map of volcanoes on Venus — all 85,000 of them. “Intrigued by reports of recent volcanic eruptions on Venus? WashU planetary scientists Paul Byrne and Rebecca Hahn want you to use their new map of 85,000 volcanoes on Venus to help locate the next active lava flow.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

PetaPixel: Midjourney Ends Free Trials After Fake AI Images go Viral. “Midjourney has ended free trials of its AI image generator citing ‘extraordinary demand’ and ‘abuse.’ Founder David Holz took to the company’s discord channel to announce the news. ‘Due to a combination of extraordinary demand and trial abuse we are temporarily disabling free trials until we have our next improvements to the system deployed,’ Holz wrote on March 28.”

Associated Press: TikTok propaganda labels fall flat in ‘huge win’ for Russia . “A year ago, following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, TikTok started labeling accounts operated by Russian state propaganda agencies as a way to tell users they were being exposed to Kremlin disinformation. An analysis a year later shows the policy has been applied inconsistently. It ignores dozens of accounts with millions of followers. Even when used, labels have little impact on Russia’s ability to exploit TikTok’s powerful algorithms as part of its effort to shape public opinion about the war.”

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

The Verge: Google denies Bard was trained with ChatGPT data. “The Information published a report Wednesday including allegations from a former Google AI researcher that the company used a rival’s responses to train its own chatbot. Google denies that Bard uses that data.”

Engadget: A new Twitter alternative is trying to lure users about to lose their old checkmark. “With Elon Musk set to pull verification from thousands of users who were verified under the company’s previous leadership, one Twitter alternative is hoping to lure some of those ‘legacy’ checkmarks to its platform. T2, an invite-only service led by two former Twitter employees, says it will allow users to carry over their ‘legacy’ Twitter verification to its site.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Politico: The campaign to save TikTok has been years in the making. “The campaign to save TikTok has been years in the making. A POLITICO investigation revealed an effort by TikTok and its parent company, ByteDance, dating back to at least 2018, long before concerns about TikTok’s Chinese ownership reached their current pitch.”

The Guardian: Cyberwarfare leaks show Russian army is adopting mindset of secret police. “A consortium of media outlets have published a bombshell investigation about Russia’s cyber-capabilities, based on a rare leak of documents. The files come from NTC Vulkan, a cybersecurity firm in Moscow that doubles as a contractor to Russian military and intelligence agencies.”

BBC: Google: India tribunal upholds $160m fine on company. “An Indian appeals court has upheld a $160m fine imposed on Google by the country’s antitrust regulator in a case related to Android’s market dominance. The National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) said the Competition Commission of India (CCI) findings were correct and Google was liable to pay the fine. But it set aside four of 10 antitrust directives imposed on the firm.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Voice of America: China to Limit Access to Largest Academic Database. “The China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), the largest academic database in China, has notified several universities and research institutes in the U.S., Taiwan and Hong Kong that their access will be limited starting April 1.”

York University: Video platforms like Zoom can disrupt normal visual communication cues. “Visual cues people normally pick up when communicating in-person can become misleading and false over video platforms like Zoom and Skype, making communication not only more difficult, but also exhausting, says new research out of York University.” 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. Check out Search Gizmos when you have a minute. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you.



March 31, 2023 at 05:40PM
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Thursday, March 30, 2023

Wearing Gay History, Blue Ridge Lambda Press, Google Advertising Transparency, More: Thursday ResearchBuzz, March 29, 2023

Wearing Gay History, Blue Ridge Lambda Press, Google Advertising Transparency, More: Thursday ResearchBuzz, March 29, 2023
By ResearchBuzz

SEARCH GIZMO OF THE DAY: Carl’s Name Net
Genealogists, this one’s for you. Carl’s Name Net takes a name and optional keywords, generates a set of name variants, and builds search URLs for Google, Google Books, Google Scholar, and Internet Archive.

NEW RESOURCES

New-to-me, via The Guardian: Wearing Gay History. From the About page: “Whether to protest, satirize, or show pride, the LGBT community’s often ignored history can be seen vividly in the clothing we often throw out. We invite you to browse through the t-shirts and explore the short exhibits to more thoroughly understand the history of LGBT communities around the country with select t-shirts from the past forty years.”

Roanoke College: Roanoke researchers lead digital preservation project for LGBTQ+ history archive. “For the first time ever, Virginians now have digital access to the full run of the historic newsletter. The Blue Ridge Lambda Press was published for 25 years, from 1983 to 2008, comprising 26 volumes, hundreds of issues, and thousands of pages of Virginia LGBTQ+ history.”

Android Police: Google’s new Ads Transparency Center makes it easier to investigate ads. “Sometimes you want to know a little more about that ad you keep seeing over and over and over again online. Today, Google is launching a new searchable hub of every ad that shows up from verified Google advertisers in Search, YouTube, and Display over the past 30 days.”

Utah State University: Beaver Mountain’s History Celebrated in New Digital Collection at USU. “Located 27 miles up the canyon from Logan, the Beaver Mountain Ski Resort has been a central part of Cache Valley’s winter sports community since 1939. The resort is also popular with Utah State University students, who can take skiing and snowboarding classes there. Despite the resort’s important place in Utah’s ski history and culture, it has typically received less attention from historians and other researchers than larger resorts in the state.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

TechCrunch: Woolly introduces a Twitter and TweetDeck-inspired Mastodon app. “The slow but steady Twitter exodus has brought a new abundance of third-party Mastodon apps like Ivory, Mammoth and Ice Cubes that connect users to the increasingly popular open source and decentralized social network. Today, we can add one more app to that list with the launch of Woolly, another solidly built iOS Mastodon client focused on offering a more customizable home screen, threaded views for reading longer conversations and a TweetDeck-inspired layout for the iPad.”

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

National Library of Finland: National Library of Finland to terminate microfilming in early 2024. “Microfilming will be discontinued for several reasons. One is that as the required technology is no longer developed except to a very limited extent, we would be unable to replace our ageing equipment. Access to equipment maintenance services is also uncertain, making microfilming risky.”

Harvard Gazette: Putting Black culture on the map — of historic places. “Only 3 percent of the sites listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places currently focus on the experiences of Black American history and culture. Jocelyn Imani, Black history and culture director at the Trust for Public Land, wants to remedy that, and is part of the effort to preserve such sites.”

CNBC: Google reshuffles virtual assistant unit with focus on Bard A.I. technology. “Google is reshuffling the reporting structure of its virtual assistant unit — called Assistant — to focus more on Bard, the company’s new artificial intelligence chat technology.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

CNN: FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried tried to bribe Chinese officials, prosecutors say. “Federal prosecutors tacked on a 13th criminal charge against Sam Bankman-Fried, accusing the FTX co-founder of bribing ‘one or more’ Chinese government officials with $40 million worth of cryptocurrency.”

Gizmodo: Court Orders GitHub to Reveal Who Leaked Twitter’s Source Code. “After Twitter caught wind of its source code being leaked on GitHub, the only thing on the company’s mind was revenge. Now, Twitter has an ace up its sleeve as the US District Court for the Northern District of California signed off on a subpoena yesterday.”

Reuters: Twitter Blocks Pakistan Government’s Official Account In India. “Twitter has blocked the Pakistan government’s account from being viewed in India in response to a legal demand, according to a notice on the social media platform on Thursday.”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

BuzzFeed News: Here’s What The World’s Most Heavily Guarded Photo Archive Looks Like. “If you travel about 51 miles north of Pittsburgh and go 220 feet underground, past armed guards, you’ll find the Bettmann Archive. If you’re somewhat familiar with the world of photojournalism, there’s a good chance you’ve heard of this renowned archive that’s managed by Getty Images. Preserving around 11 million images, the archive is a visual record of many of the world’s most important historical events since the invention of the camera in the early 1800s.” Good morning, Internet…

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March 30, 2023 at 05:31PM
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