Wednesday, December 29, 2021

Facebook Roundup, December 29, 2021

Facebook Roundup, December 29, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

KnowTechie: Surprise! Meta has been voted worst company of the year for 2021. “The Yahoo Finance community has spoken and it has voted for Meta, the company formerly known as Facebook, as 2021’s worst company of the year. The competition was stiff this year, but Meta’s year of controversy has been enough to award it the crown.”

USEFUL STUFF

Lifehacker: How to Spot ‘Coordinated Inauthentic Behavior’ on Facebook, According to Snopes. “You probably can’t do much to shield yourself from this kind of stuff, short of swearing off social media forever. But you can learn to recognize it for what it is. Here are some tips on how to spot this particular brand of fake news, according to Snopes.com.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

BuzzFeed News: “Corrosive Communities”: How A Facebook Fight Over Wind Power Predicts the Future of Local Politics in America. “Like higher-profile local battles over mask mandates and critical race theory, disagreements over wind policy have become intensely antagonistic and frequently hysterical. But unlike those issues, opposition to turbines isn’t neatly polarized along red–blue lines: It often pits conservatives against conservatives and liberals against liberals. Nor does it revolve around a once-in-a-generation event, like a global pandemic. Instead, it’s elemental — quite literally, in the air. In this sense, it may offer the purest example yet of the power of social media to warp local politics in 2021, to make a single emotional issue stand in for and subsume all others.”

CNN: Zombies, laser tag and confusion: Here’s what it’s like inside Meta’s virtual world. “Horizon Worlds is Meta’s most ambitious effort yet to get people to hang out together in VR, after spending billions on this technology and recently making it an even bigger focus focus as the company touts its ‘metaverse’ ambitions. The launch comes at a promising moment: VR is more affordable, accessible and capable than ever before. But challenges remain.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

The Verge: FTC opens antitrust probe into Meta’s purchase of VR fitness app Supernatural. “The probe means that antitrust regulators are starting to scrutinize the-company-formally-known-as-Facebook’s interest in scooping up VR startups, not just its traditional social media acquisitions. According to The Information’s Josh Sisco, Meta’s previous five virtual reality acquisitions, including its deal for the studio behind hit game Beat Saber, weren’t probed by the government because the purchase prices were too small. ‘But those regulators are slowing down the $400 million-plus Supernatural deal, according to two people with knowledge of the situation,’ the report notes.”

Politico: Islamic extremists sidestep Facebook’s content police. “Photos of beheadings, extremist propaganda and violent hate speech related to Islamic State and the Taliban were shared for months within Facebook groups over the past year despite the social networking giant’s claims it had increased efforts to remove such content. The posts — some tagged as ‘insightful’ and ‘engaging’ via new Facebook tools to promote community interactions — championed the Islamic extremists’ violence in Iraq and Afghanistan, including videos of suicide bombings and calls to attack rivals across the region and in the West, according to a review of social media activity between April and December. At least one of the groups contained more than 100,000 members.”

CNET: Facebook, Messenger, Instagram and WhatsApp users targeted in phishing scheme. “Meta, formerly known as Facebook, said Monday it’s suing people who are behind a phishing scheme to steal usernames and passwords from its platforms. The lawsuit, filed in a federal court in Northern California, says that since 2019 more than 39,000 websites have been created that impersonated the login pages for Facebook, Instagram, Messenger and WhatsApp.”

BBC: Fake Covid passes advertised for sale online. “Fraudsters are directing people on Facebook to sites claiming to sell fake Covid vaccine passes for those who have not been jabbed, the BBC has found. People in the UK are required to prove their vaccination status in order to access some places and to avoid self-isolation after travelling abroad.”

SecurityWeek: Facebook Patches Vulnerability Exposing Page Admin Identity. “Businesses can use Facebook Pages to increase the visibility of their brand on the social media platform, but the Facebook account that has administrative rights over the page remains private. However, 19-year-old Sudip Shah from Pokhara, Nepal, discovered that an insecure direct object reference (IDOR) vulnerability in Facebook for Android could be exploited to reveal the identity of the page admin.”

News @ Northeastern: Will The Metaverse Protect Our Privacy— Or Will It Exploit Us More Than Ever?. “The metaverse is more than the latest obsession of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg. It’s a three-dimensional world of virtual and augmented reality that we will be exploring—via our digital avatars—over the next decade. Amid the unlimited possibilities of what may be coming, consider this reality. If our privacy is already under siege in the two-dimensional internet, imagine how vulnerable we may be in 3D?”

RESEARCH & OPINION

EFF: Virtual Worlds, Real People: Human Rights in the Metaverse. “Today, December 10, is International Human Rights Day. On this day in 1948, the U.N. General Assembly adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the document that lays out the principles and building blocks of current and future human rights instruments. In honor of this anniversary, Access Now and the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) are calling upon governments and companies to address human rights in the context of virtual and augmented reality (VR and AR) and ensure that these rights are respected and enforced.”

WBEZ: I’m a Black woman and the metaverse scares me. Here’s how to make the next iteration of the internet inclusive. . “Problems are already surfacing. Avatars, the graphical personas people can create or buy to represent themselves in virtual environments, are being priced differently based on the perceived race of the avatar, and racist and sexist harassment is cropping up in today’s pre-metaverse immersive environments. Ensuring that this next iteration of the internet is inclusive and works for everyone will require that people from marginalized communities take the lead in shaping it.

Carnegie Mellon University: Facebook Consumers Face Challenges In Valuing Personal Data. “While platforms can quantify the value of users’ data to the platform, users face hurdles in pinpointing the value of data to themselves, which jeopardizes the equitable allocation of the benefits from consumer data. A new study examined how Facebook consumers’ valuations of their personal data change once they have received information about the value of that data and how valuations vary across demographic groups. The study identified substantial differences in users’ valuations of their social media data by gender, race, and income.”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

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December 30, 2021 at 12:37AM
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Tuesday, December 28, 2021

AI for GLAM, Google Fit, Audio-Journaling, more: Tuesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 28, 2021

AI for GLAM, Google Fit, Audio-Journaling, more: Tuesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 28, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

British Library Digital Scholarship Blog: Intro to AI for GLAM. “Earlier this year Daniel van Strien and I teamed up with colleagues Mike Trizna from the Smithsonian and Mark Bell at the National Archives, UK in a Carpentries Lesson Development Study Group with an eye to developing an Introduction to AI for GLAM (Galleries, Libraries, Archives and Museums) lesson for eventual inclusion in Library Carpentry…. The result is the framework and foundations for what we hope will be a useful, ever evolving and continuously collaboratively written workshop that can provide a gentle and practical introduction for GLAM to the world of machine learning and its implications for the sector.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

How-To Geek: No Smartwatch? Google Can Check Your Heart Rate on a Phone. “While not as quick and efficient as using a smartwatch or fitness tracker, Google Fit is an excellent alternative if you’re willing to wait around a bit to get your results. You can check your heart and respiratory rate using your iPhone’s camera and Google Fit.”

USEFUL STUFF

MakeUseOf: 5 Audio-Journaling Apps to Beat Anxiety. “Many people keep journals for their mental health benefits. Journaling about your feelings can reduce mental distress and is a highly encouraged practice for people dealing with anxiety. Audio-journaling, one of the recently introduced forms of journaling, has proven to be effective at this. Let’s take a look at the best audio-journaling apps.”

CogDogBlog: Forcing Google’s Image Search to Provide CC Licensed Results by Default. “I find perverse pleasure in finding a way to force Google to Sit, Stay, Rollover, and do the tricks I want it to do rather than what it decides. The sense of power is of course a fabricated illusion, but still, the effect is robustly divine. After some explanation of my current approach, creating a quick shortcut for google image results that are CC licensed, and steps hpw ypu can do the same, I present my newest hatched karate chop to Google.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Mashable: Wildest things tech executives said in 2021. “Tech executives are typically known for their work ethic, bank accounts, ability to imagine a different world in the future, and, on occasion, some very weird hobbies. What they are not known for, though, is their ability to communicate in a way that is calm, confidence-inducing, or even, at the very least, kind. And in 2021, boy, did we see that on display.”

AFP: Chinese tech giant Baidu tests metaverse waters with new app. “Chinese tech giant Baidu on Monday took its first steps into the metaverse industry with the launch of a virtual reality app, looking to test the waters in what is considered by many to be the next phase in the internet’s evolution. The Beijing-based company joins brands such as Nike and Ferrari in rushing to experiment with virtual goods against a backdrop of predictions that the metaverse could one day overtake and replace the web of today.”

Christian Post: More than 30K churches using big data from tech firm Gloo to target new members. “More than 30,000 churches have signed up for the services of Gloo, a small company that uses people’s personal data and online activities to target individuals who might be more receptive to their message and become new members as they seek to sure up dwindling numbers in their pews that was made worse by the COVID-19 pandemic.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Global Banking and Finance Review: Why open databases are easy pickings for cyber criminals. “Some of the largest breaches in recent times have stemmed from unsecured public databases. In June it was discovered that a database of 815 million records was left unprotected by web hosting company DreamHost. Last year, BlueKai, a data analysis platform owned by Oracle was found to have left potentially billions of records exposed through an unsecured server. Such breaches can be cripplingly expensive for the data holder. The average cost of a breach involving 40-50 million records was estimated to be $364 million in 2020, an increase of $19m from the year before. The average cost in 2020 jumped to $388 million for incidents involving more than 50 million records.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Independent: Brain chip allows paralysed man to post first ever ‘direct-thought’ tweet. “A paralysed man has made the first ‘direct-thought tweet’ after having a computer chip implanted in his brain. Philip O-Keefe, a 62-year-old Australian who suffers from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), composed and posted the tweet using only his thoughts via a brain computer interface developed by neurotech startup Synchron.”

CNET: Mummy of beloved pharaoh digitally ‘unwrapped’ after 3,000 years. “Scientists have unwrapped nearly every mummy discovered thus far, finding remarkable evidence of things like traditional burial practices and unique facial features. But for three millennia, one Egyptian pharaoh’s remains, discovered in 1881, have been left untouched for fear of tampering with their stunning condition. That ruler was Amenhotep I. Thanks to the age of computing, though, the royal mummy has finally been unveiled. A team of researchers digitally exhumed Amenhotep I’s body using computing tomography imaging, a sort of X-ray imaging process.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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December 29, 2021 at 01:28AM
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Printing Hate, Confederate Time Capsules, OBS Studio, more: Tuesday ResearchBuzz, December 28, 2021

Printing Hate, Confederate Time Capsules, OBS Studio, more: Tuesday ResearchBuzz, December 28, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Southern Maryland News: Howard Center’s new database expands the scope of ‘Printing Hate’ series. “In 1887, a white-owned Kansas newspaper expressed disappointment that townspeople had not immediately lynched Richard Wood, a Black man, instead of letting authorities take him to jail…. When a lynch mob later broke into the jail and hanged Wood, the paper concluded: ‘a negro demon has met a just doom.’ Both newspapers — Mississippi’s Okolona Messenger and Kansas’ Leavenworth Times — are still published today. These examples of deeply harmful coverage of racial terror lynchings are included in a new database created for the University of Maryland Howard Center for Investigative Journalism’s ‘Printing Hate’ series.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

CBS News: Crews find second potential time capsule at Virginia’s Robert E. Lee statue site. “Crews wrapping up the removal Monday of a giant pedestal that once held a statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee in Richmond found what appeared to be a second and long-sought-after time capsule, Virginia Governor Ralph Northam said.” The second capsule will be opened at 1pm today (Tuesday).

USEFUL STUFF

Make Tech Easier: How to Use OBS to Stream on Twitch, Facebook Gaming, and YouTube Gaming. “Do you want to know how your favorite streamers are coming up with high-quality streams using software like OBS? In this article, you’ll learn the basics of setting up your Twitch, Facebook Gaming, or YouTube Gaming live stream using Open Broadcaster Software or OBS Studio.”

MakeUseOf: How to Easily Create Cool Videos on Windows With Microsoft’s Clipchamp. “Videos are perhaps the most popular choice of media for almost everything today. You can find them in social media posts, on YouTube, in promos, and they’re even used for winning over clients. And though creating professional-looking videos might seem complex to you, it’s a breeze with an easy video editor like Clipchamp. Microsoft recently acquired the popular Clipchamp video editor, and it’s now available as a desktop app on the Microsoft Store on your Windows 10 or 11 PC. So let’s explore how we can easily create cool videos with Clipchamp.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

British Library Digital Scholarship Blog: Three crowdsourcing opportunities with the British Library. “Digital Curator Dr Mia Ridge writes, In case you need a break from whatever combination of weather, people and news is around you, here are some ways you can entertain yourself (or the kids!) while helping make collections of the British Library more findable, or help researchers understand our past. You might even learn something or make new discoveries along the way!”

CNET: Smart glasses could arrive in 2022, but will still need a lot of work. “A whole new wave of connected glasses could be coming next year. Will any of them figure out how to stay on my face?”

New York Times: The 2021 Good Tech Awards. “Every December, partly to cheer myself up after a year of covering tech’s scandals and shortfalls, I use this column to lift up a handful of tech projects that improved the world during the year. My criteria are somewhat loose and arbitrary, but I look for the kinds of worthy, altruistic projects that apply technology to big, societal problems, and that don’t get much attention from the tech press, like start-ups that are using artificial intelligence to fight wildfires, or food-delivery programs for the needy.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

San Francisco Chronicle: Ninth Circuit upholds $13M settlement in Google Street View privacy case. “Google can pay $13 million to privacy-rights groups to settle a suit over its former use of ‘Street View’ vehicles to collect private computer information, including emails and passwords, from homes around the world, a federal appeals court ruled Monday.”

MarketWatch: Google enters 2022 battling antitrust actions on multiple fronts — with more likely to come. “A rumored Justice Department lawsuit targeting Google’s digital advertising practices tops its list of regulatory headaches heading into the new year…. Google already faces an antitrust case from a group of 36 state attorneys general and the District of Columbia that asserts the company’s mobile app store abuses its market power and forces aggressive terms on software developers. A Utah-led lawsuit targets Google’s Play app store. Those cases are set for trial in 2023 or later.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

NBC News: Racial pay gaps are an issue in every industry. Nowhere is it worse than in influencer marketing, a new study says.. “The study found that the pay gap between white influencers and influencers who are Black, Indigenous or other people of color is 29 percent. When the research focused specifically on white and Black influencers, the margin widened to 35 percent. About 77 percent of Black influencers fall into the ‘nano’ or ‘micro’ influencers category because their followings are less than 50,000, the study said. About 59 percent of white influencers fall into that category.”

The Guardian: Social media is a bad feelings machine. Why can’t we just turn it off for good?. “I write this as someone who owes her career and her partner to social media. I had no journalism qualifications, connections or experience when I began blogging in the mid-2010s, and through Twitter I was able to get a paid internship that gave me my start in journalism. My boyfriend and I connected through Instagram after years of liking each other’s posts. So much of my personal, and professional happiness has been made possible through social media. But as time has gone on I have become more and more certain that the solution to many of the most pressing issues of our time is simply to switch social media off.”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

Habitat for Humanity: Habitat for Humanity Peninsula and Greater Williamsburg Dedicates Nation’s First-Ever 3D Printed Habitat Home to Williamsburg Family. “The three-bedroom home with two full baths is the first-ever completed 3D printed Habitat house in the nation, and the gallery in attendance on the first day of winter in a Williamsburg subdivision reflected the culmination of the community partnerships that made it happen.” Good morning, Internet…

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



December 28, 2021 at 06:22PM
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Monday, December 27, 2021

Monday CoronaBuzz, December 27, 2021: 47 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Monday CoronaBuzz, December 27, 2021: 47 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.
By ResearchBuzz

Please get a booster shot. Please wear a mask when you’re inside with a bunch of people. Much love.

USEFUL STUFF

CNET: COVID vaccines for kids: What to know about boosters and more. “The CDC recommends COVID-19 vaccine boosters for teens 16 and older, while Pfizer tests a new three-shot vaccine protocol for kids under 5.”

UPDATES

Vox: Welcome to Covid-19’s “junior year.” It’s not pretty.. “After a brief reprieve from surging cases in the fall, omicron, the newest and most transmissible Covid-19 variant yet, is tearing its way across the nation, causing a nearly 30 percent spike nationally in cases in a matter of days. As communities roll out eerily familiar safety measures, for some, it’s feeling like 2020 again: In the past few weeks, California and New York reinstated indoor mask mandates, restaurants from Philadelphia to Houston to Los Angeles are temporarily closing amid outbreaks, at-home rapid tests are sold out from coast to coast, and some universities are sending students back online.”

KERA News: North Texas food banks prepare for another uncertain year as COVID-19 omicron variant hits. “Food banks across North Texas are preparing for another uncertain year as the new COVID-19 variant omicron spreads across the country. For Kara Nickens, CEO of the Wichita Falls Area Food Bank, 2021 looked a lot like 2020. ‘Last year, we [distributed] 4.4 million pounds of food, and we’re right on track to end with that same amount,’ Nickens said. ‘We’re a small food bank. So for us, that’s a lot. It really pushes the limit because we have such a small staff here, and we have a 12-county area.'”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

CNET: The great resignation is changing work in America, and experts say it’s here to stay. “Whatever the reason, this great resignation, as some have called it, is quickly remaking what it means to work in America. For some, that means rethinking their careers. For others, it’s a spiritual awakening, with a renewed commitment to a healthier balance between work and home. Some people moved away from big cities while working remotely during the pandemic, and now they don’t want to move back. Others are finding plentiful opportunities for jobs they can perform anywhere, whereas before the only jobs they could find were near where they lived.”

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

Canadian Press: Dentists see pandemic stress in patients with more grinding, cracked, broken teeth. “Stress and anxiety connected to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic is revealing itself in people’s mouths, say dentists who report increasing cases of patients with cracked, broken and damaged teeth over the past 20 months.”

Columbus Dispatch: Preventable tragedies are unfolding in Greater Columbus hospital, doctors and nurses say. “Dr. Andy Thomas, chief clinical officer at the Ohio State University Wexner Center, said with family and friends celebrating the season together, a post-Christmas uptick in COVID-19 cases is inevitable in Columbus. ‘We’re seeing … case numbers in the northeast Ohio area that are nine to 10 times higher than what they were just six weeks ago. We are lucky right now in Columbus that we are not seeing those same numbers, but we expect in the next two to three weeks that we will,’ Thomas said during the Dispatch presents Columbus Conversation, ‘An Urgent Appeal for Help Stopping the COVID-19 Surge.'”

WRAL: U.S. Blood Banks Experiencing Biggest Shortage in a Decade. “The pandemic has caused many supply-chain bottlenecks in everyday life, but few are as critical as the United States’ ever-shrinking blood banks. For the American Red Cross, which supplies about 40% of the nation’s blood, and other nonprofit blood centers, the problem lies mostly at the top of the chain: the diminishing number of healthy donors.”

HEALTH CARE – CAPACITY

Morning Sun: Michigan hospitals ‘teetering’ under current COVID-19 surge. “Hospitals in southeast Michigan today are in worse shape than they were during the first surge of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020. With the holidays approaching and the unknowns about the Omicron variant, hospital administrators are concerned.”

Fox 11 LA: Los Angeles County’s COVID-19 hospitalizations surpass 900. “The number of COVID patients in county hospitals increased to 904 Sunday, up from 849 the previous day, according to the latest state figures. Of those patients, 188 were in intensive care, up one from Saturday. The number of hospitalized COVID patients has been rising in recent days, after falling as low as 551 in November.”

Louisiana Department of Health: COVID-19 hospitalizations double in one week amid Omicron surge. “The Louisiana Department of Health announces that 449 people in Louisiana are hospitalized with COVID-19 – a figure that has doubled in the last week. The last time we reported this many COVID-19 hospitalizations was mid-October, as we came down from our third and then-worst COVID-19 surge. Eighty percent of people currently hospitalized with COVID-19 are not fully vaccinated.”

INSTITUTIONS

Vanity Fair: “I’ve Just Been Swept Up in This Wave”: How the Earliest COVID Coverage Shaped Our World. “The omicron surge now dominating headlines comes as pandemic content has long been at the forefront of news coverage, a far cry from the murky, early reports—shared largely among specialists this week in 2019—of a mysterious pneumonia-like illness in Wuhan.”

Poynter: More than 50 local newsrooms launched during the pandemic. “The pandemic changed the news business and, in a lot of ways, not for the better. It accelerated layoffs. It hastened the end of more than 100 news organizations. It led a handful of newsrooms losing their actual newsrooms. But in some communities, the pandemic also clarified the value of reliable information. More than 50 local newsrooms launched in the United States in 2020 and 2021. Nearly as many local newsletters started publishing in that time. We found them in 27 states and Puerto Rico.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

Associated Press: Despite supply issues and omicron COVID variant, holiday sales rise 8.5%. “Mastercard Spending Pulse, which tracks all kinds of payments including cash and debit cards, reported Sunday that holiday sales had risen 8.5% from a year earlier. Mastercard SpendingPulse had expected a 7.4% increase. The results, which covered Nov. 1 through Dec. 24, were fueled by purchases of clothing and jewelry. Holiday sales were up 10.7% compared with the pre-pandemic 2019 holiday period.”

CNN: Cruises are once again facing disruption because of Covid-19. “At least four ocean cruise ships were turned away from ports of call or were prohibited from letting passengers disembark in the Americas this week because of Covid-19 cases aboard. Though other cruises have had cases since US-based ships resumed service this summer with vaccine requirements and other measures meant to minimize outbreaks, the rate of cruises forced to alter their itineraries appears to have ticked up.”

Charlotte Observer: Wells Fargo makes another major change to its return to office plans during COVID. “After postponing its return to the office three times, Wells Fargo has delayed its return to the office yet again, this time indefinitely, the bank said in a statement Monday.”

CNN: Travel nightmare: Another 2,500 flights canceled Monday. “More than 2,500 flights have been canceled Monday as Covid cases surge across the globe. Of the more than 2,500 canceled flights, nearly 1,000 were within, into or out of the United States, according to FlightAware. Almost 8,000 flights are delayed.”

UNITED STATES / UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

MassLive: COVID cases likely to ‘go much higher’ as health officials battle ‘rapid spread’ of omicron, Fauci says. “As federal, state and local health officials grapple with the ‘rapid spread’ of the ‘extraordinary’ omicron variant, the U.S. is headed for a continued surge of COVID-19 cases this winter, Dr. Anthony Fauci says. ‘Given the sheer volume of cases that you see now, every day it goes up and up,’ Fauci, President Joe Biden’s chief medical adviser, told ABC News’ “’This Week’ on Sunday morning. ‘The last weekly average was about 150,000, and it will likely go much higher.'”

Associated Press: FEMA wants to give families up to $9,000 for COVID funerals, but many don’t apply. “When Wanda Olson’s son-in-law died in March after contracting COVID-19, she and her daughter had to grapple with more than just their sudden grief. They had to come up with money for a cremation. Even without a funeral, the bill came to nearly $2,000, a hefty sum that Olson initially covered. She and her daughter then learned of a federal program that reimburses families up to $9,000 for funeral costs for loved ones who died of COVID-19.”

WORLD/COUNTRY GOVERNMENT

Associated Press: France records over 100K COVID-19 cases in one day for first time. “France has recorded more than 100,000 virus infections in a single day for the first time in the pandemic and COVID-19 hospitalizations have doubled over the past month, as the fast-spreading omicron variant complicates the French government’s efforts to stave off a new lockdown.”

Yonhap News Agency: Korean Air ordered to temporarily suspend flights to Hong Kong due to virus infections . “Korean Air Lines Co., South Korea’s national flag carrier, has been ordered to suspend flights to Hong Kong for two weeks due to coronavirus infections found among its passengers aboard a plane that landed there last week.”

Associated Press: Live Updates: Israel trials 4th dose of COVID-19 vaccine. “Israel has begun trials of a fourth dose of coronavirus vaccine in what is believed to be the first study of its kind. The trial began at Sheba Medical Center, outside Tel Aviv, with 150 medical personnel who received a booster dose in August receiving a fourth shot of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine. The staff receiving the additional dose were tested and found to have low antibody levels.”

Reuters: China regulator to suspend two China Eastern flights from New York due to COVID-19 cases. “China’s aviation regulator will suspend two China Eastern 600115.SS flights from New York to Shanghai from January 3 due to COVID-19 cases, the Shanghai government said on Monday.”

Reuters: UK’s daily COVID-19 infections dip under 100,000 mark. “Britain reported 98,515 new cases of COVID-19 on Monday and 143 deaths within 28 days of a positive test result. Data was also published for Dec. 25, showing 113,628 infections and Dec. 26, showing 108,893 infections.”

STATE GOVERNMENT

Morning Sun: Whitmer predicts tough 4-6 weeks in COVID-19 battle. “The governor said from Jan. 15 to Dec. 3 in Michigan, 88% of COVID cases were unvaccinated or not fully vaccinated, while 88% of the hospitalized COVID patients were unvaccinated and 85.5% of the COVID deaths were people who were unvaccinated.”

Auburn Citizen: Illegal price gouging on COVID-19 test kits reported. “In a news release, Attorney General Letitia James said that her office has received complaints of COVID-19 testing products being sold at double or triple retail price. Standard BinaxNOW brand test kits sold at stores for between $14 and $25 for a package of two tests are reportedly being unlawfully sold for more than $40 and up to $70 per package.”

WCVB: National Guard begins hospital deployment amid COVID-19 case spike. “Gov. Charlie Baker activated up to 500 members of the Massachusetts National Guard to address the non-clinical support needs of hospitals and transport systems. Hospitals have also been directed to postpone or cancel all nonessential elective procedures that would likely result in inpatient admission.”

Concord Monitor: Flush with federal COVID relief funds more states consider employee bonuses, wage increases . “Like private-sector employers, state agencies nationwide are struggling to find and keep workers amid a tight labor market and burnout because of the COVID-19 pandemic. And governors, like business owners, are proposing higher pay in a bid to recruit workers and convince them to stay, helped by federal aid and huge budget surpluses in most states. They include even some Republican governors, who tend to frown on spending increases and can be openly antagonistic to state workers and their unions.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

The National Academies: Lessons from COVID-19 on Executing Communications and Engagement at the Community Level During a Health Crisis. “On May 20, 2021, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine held a virtual convening of public health and communications practitioners to examine the challenges, opportunities, and lessons they saw while executing effective communications and community engagement in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.”

News 12 The Bronx: MTA: Subway services to see slowdown due to rise in COVID cases. “The MTA says it’s making service cuts because of the latest COVID surge as the Omicron variant sweeps through the city. Officials say they’re working to keep service consistent, but that you may have a longer wait for your train, adding that reducing scheduled service will help them put train crews where they’re needed most to avoid canceling individual trips.”

NBC Washington: DC Residents Can Now Self-Report Their COVID Cases in App. “People can now report if they’ve tested positive for COVID-19 using the DC COVID Alert Notice (DC CAN) app. D.C. health officials say the app’s new feature will speed up the District’s contact tracing efforts. Right now, the app’s latest feature available only for iPhone users. Android users will be able to get the feature starting Jan. 4.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS – CELEBRITIES/FAMOUS

WCMY: KISS’ Paul Stanley contracts COVID for second time: “My entire family has it”. “Stanley previously tested positive for COVID-19 this past August, as did his band mate, Gene Simmons. As a result, KISS postponed a number of dates on their ongoing End of the World farewell tour.”

SPORTS

ESPN: Military, Fenway Bowls canceled because of COVID-19 issues. “Two more bowl games have been canceled because of COVID-19 concerns. The Military Bowl Presented by Peraton and the Wasabi Fenway Bowl were canceled Sunday because of COVID-19 issues in the Boston College and Virginia football programs. Boston College had been set to play East Carolina on Monday afternoon in the game that was set to air on ESPN.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

Michigan Daily: Over 700 UMich students send open letter advocating for fully in-person semester amid calls to modify plans. “Over 700 University of Michigan students have penned an open letter calling for the University to keep its plan for the Winter 2022 semester – which includes a face covering mandate, mandatory COVID-19 booster shots, and primarily in-person classes. The letter, dated Dec. 22, comes after over 900 members of the University community wrote an open letter to University President Mark Schlissel to delay in-person learning in response to the rapid spread of the Omicron variant of COVID-19. ”

Poynter: How COVID-19 impacted student life at a one Texas commuter campus. “Think ‘student life’ on an American college campus and you’re likely to imagine hanging out on the quad, evening concerts and cheering on club sports. But the student life picture looks different at Texas A&M University San Antonio — a Hispanic-serving institute that’s just 12 years old, has one residence hall and sits on 700 acres of underdeveloped Texas countryside. So what’s a student club to do to get people to engage?”

HEALTH

Bloomberg: Coronavirus Can Persist for Months After Traversing Entire Body. “The coronavirus that causes Covid-19, SARS-CoV-2, can spread within days from the airways to the heart, brain and almost every organ system in the body, where it may persist for months, a study found.”

NPR: What our family learned from our post-Thanksgiving coronavirus outbreak. “Breakthrough experiences are becoming more common as our vaccine protection wanes, our pandemic precautions fade and the variants become more prevalent and more evasive. Our family’s saga began the Monday after Thanksgiving. And it left us with a handful of questions that I’ll try to answer in the hopes that our experience may help others navigate the December holidays.”

Mashable: Lost your sense of smell? It may impact your sex life.. “It is, after all, my job as a sometimes sex writer to think about life through an erotic lens. And I’d noticed that, around the same time my sense of smell started to fade, sex had begun to feel somehow flatter to me — like there was less feedback pulling me into and engrossing all of me within the moment. I wondered whether that was a coincidence, or yet another unexpected effect of my slow sensory decline.”

NPR: With omicron, you need a mask that means business. “With another coronavirus variant racing across the U.S., once again health authorities are urging people to mask up indoors. Yes, you’ve heard it all before. But given how contagious omicron is, experts say, it’s seriously time to upgrade to an N95 or similar high-filtration respirator when you’re in public indoor spaces.”

TECHNOLOGY / INTERNET

The Guardian: No comfort at the bottom of the feed: how to prevent information overload in the time of Covid. “Information-seeking has become a complex habit to manage during recent years of plague and unrest. For some, both relief and anxiety are found on platforms where work, play and social connection are increasingly blurred. It feels necessary to be informed and prepared, but it’s also easy to fall into the numbing embrace of case rates and vaccination statistics – as if comfort can be found at the bottom of the feed.” I am actually not doing this to keep myself informed or because I like scaring myself silly. I’m doing this because I think this collection will be useful to researchers when they want to study this time in history. And if it won’t, well, at least I’m keeping myself busy.

RESEARCH

Newswise: Patient Receives Antibodies Discovered at Vanderbilt to Prevent COVID-19. “On Dec. 22, Caroline Davis of Nashville became the first patient at Vanderbilt University Medical Center to receive injections of a new antibody combination to protect her from COVID-19. Davis, who is being treated for cancer at VUMC, said she could not produce antibodies against the COVID-19 virus on her own, despite receiving two doses of a COVID-19 vaccine and a booster, because the chemotherapy she is receiving suppresses her immune system.”

University of North Carolina: Sugar-coated COVID-19 test takes advantage of coronavirus’ sweet tooth. “Even those tracking each new discovery about the coronavirus and its variants may not be aware of the virus’ sugar cravings. Researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and University of California San Diego take advantage of the virus’ sweet tooth in the design of a sugar-coated COVID-19 test strip that’s been effective at detecting all known variants of the coronavirus, including delta.” This article came out just slightly before omicron blew up.

Physician’s Weekly: Cancer Patients With Breakthrough COVID-19 Remain at Risk for Severe Outcomes. “Patients with cancer who develop breakthrough infection following COVID-19 vaccination remain at risk for severe outcomes, according to a study published online Dec. 24 in the Annals of Oncology.”

OUTBREAKS

Newswise: COVID-19 infection detected in deer in 6 Ohio locations. “Scientists have detected infection by at least three variants of the virus that causes COVID-19 in free-ranging white-tailed deer in six northeast Ohio locations, the research team has reported.”

New Zealand Herald: Covid 19 Delta outbreak: Auckland Christmas partygoers urged to get tested immediately. “Partygoers who attended an Otara Christmas party are being asked to self-isolate and immediately get tested after a guest tested positive for Covid-19. A Christmas party held on Thursday December 23 at East Tamaki Community Hall in Otara has been identified as a new location of interest. Anyone who attended this party has been identified as a close contact.”

WLWT: Ohio reports more than 20,000 COVID-19 cases over holiday weekend . “The holiday weekend brought more than 20,000 new COVID-19 cases in Ohio. The 20,917 cases reflected totals from Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. More than 100 people were hospitalized because of the virus.”

USA Today Network: Lee County’s COVID cases up 248%; Florida cases surge 333%. “New coronavirus cases leaped in Florida in the week ending Sunday, rising 333% as 124,865 cases were reported. The previous week had 28,841 new cases of the virus that causes COVID-19.”

FUNNY

XKCD: Rapid Test Results . This is a cartoon, and moreover it’s an XKCD cartoon so there’s no way I can do it justice. Just click on it.

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



December 28, 2021 at 01:00AM
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Open Access Books Collection, Nebraska Narcan, North Carolina Newspapers, more: Monday ResearchBuzz, December 27, 2021

Open Access Books Collection, Nebraska Narcan, North Carolina Newspapers, more: Monday ResearchBuzz, December 27, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Library of Congress: The Open Access Books Collection: Expanding Access and Building Connections. “In March 2020, we first shared about the growing collection of open access e-books available on loc.gov. A lot has changed since then but, in particular, the Open Access Books Collection was created. This newly created collection brings together all known open access e-books available on loc.gov, the number of which has grown significantly from about 300 titles to over 3,200.”

KOLN (Nebraska): New website shows where you can get free Narcan. “A new website is making it easier for people to access Narcan for free in Nebraska…. you can enter your zipcode and it shows you a map of the closest locations offering free NARCAN along with resources for treatment centers.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

DigitalNC: Additional Smithfield Herald Issues Now Available. “Thanks to funding from the State Library of North Carolina’s LSTA Grant and our partner, Johnston County Heritage Center, over five hundred issues from 1911 to 1925 of The Smithfield Herald are now available on our website. These issues expand DigitalNC’s previously digitized issues from 1901 all the way to 1925.”

USEFUL STUFF

Lifehacker: 9 Useful Features for Anyone Who Takes Screenshots on Their iPhone. “Your iPhone’s built-in screenshot tool has several cool tricks up its sleeve. From turning your squiggly hand-drawn lines into perfectly symmetrical shapes to hiding sensitive information, there’s a lot more you can do than you might expect. Here’s how to make the most of your iPhone’s screenshot utility.” Slideshow, but useful.

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Express: Queen looking for employee to work on royal archives – warns deadlines ‘will stretch you’ . “The new hire would join a team of experts at the Queen’s Berkshire home to work between February 2022 and March 2023. During this time, the perfect candidate will tackle the challenge to ‘digitise material held by the Royal Archives and the Royal Collection, producing valuable content for high profile public access.'”

BuzzFeed News: The One Place Left On Earth Not Ruled By An Algorithm Is Free To The Public. “The picture collection consists of exactly what you might think — visual information from magazines, postcards, clippings, and photographs collected by the New York Public Library’s staff since 1915. From Singapore to silver mining, Oklahoma to olive oil, there’s a folder containing a century’s worth of photographs for nearly everything. For visitors and artists, one of the most appealing things about the Picture Collection is that it’s one of the few spaces left available to us that is untouched by algorithms.”

Tone Deaf: Cardi B launches social media platform ‘Centerfold’ with Playboy. “Earlier this month, it was announced that Cardi B has been appointed the first creative director in residence of Playboy. Now, the singer has unveiled her first move: opening a social media platform called Centerfold.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Bleeping Computer: Russian hackers made millions by stealing SEC earning reports. “A Russian national working for a cybersecurity company has been extradited to the U.S. where he is being charged for hacking into computer networks of two U.S.-based filing agents used by multiple companies to file quarterly and annual earnings through the Securities and Exchange Commissions (SEC) system.”

Techdirt: Hey The North Face! When You Said Sending Us A Bogus Trademark Threat Was A Mistake, We Believed You; So Why Did You Do It Again?. “Nine years ago, someone Photoshopped a fake patch parodying The North Face logo, with one that said ‘Hey Fuck Face.’ They posted it to Flickr. You guys lost your shit and filed a bogus takedown notice on this obvious parody that was not being used in commerce in anyway. But, much worse, nine years later, you had your ‘brand protection’ company send us — a news organization — an even more bogus takedown for our reporting on it.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

The Next Web: Research indicates the whole universe could be a giant neural network. “Vitaly Vanchurin, a professor of physics at the University of Minnesota Duluth, published an incredible paper last August entitled ‘The World as a Neural Network’ on the arXiv pre-print server. It managed to slide past our notice until today when Futurism’s Victor Tangermann published an interview with Vanchurin discussing the paper.”

9 News (Australia): National shark attack database rebrands to minimise stigma. “Formerly known as the Australian Shark Attack File, the organisation will now be referred to as the Shark Incident Database, with a particular emphasis on removing the word ‘attack’ and instead focussing on ‘bites’, ‘interactions’ and ‘negative encounters’.”

The Conversation: What will 2022 bring in the way of misinformation on social media? 3 experts weigh in. “At the end of 2020, it seemed hard to imagine a worse year for misinformation on social media, given the intensity of the presidential election and the trauma of the COVID-19 pandemic. But 2021 proved up to the task, starting with the Jan. 6 insurrection and continuing with copious amounts of falsehoods and distortions about COVID-19 vaccines. To get a sense of what 2022 could hold, we asked three researchers about the evolution of misinformation on social media.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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



December 27, 2021 at 11:48PM
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Sunday, December 26, 2021

India Office Map Catalogue of 1878, Digital Arts Festival, Gamified Productivity, more: Sunday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 26, 2021

India Office Map Catalogue of 1878, Digital Arts Festival, Gamified Productivity, more: Sunday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 26, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

British Library: Released online: The 1878 India Office map collection catalogue. “The India Office map catalogue of 1878, now released online for the first time on the British Library Shared Research Repository, is a valuable finding aid to one of the world’s most complex and mercurial map collections.”

EVENTS

NoCamels: Digital Arts Festival At Tower Of David Museum To Showcase Impact Of AI On Art. “The art festival, which will hold a hybrid of physical and virtual events from December 27 through the 31st, will give viewers the chance to take in 30 works of art, six original site-specific pieces, nine lectures, 10 live performances, 12 international artists, and 28 Israeli artists. Many of these events will be livestreamed on the Tower of David website.” I went to the livestreaming site. I only saw a Hebrew version but it was easy to both translate and navigate.

USEFUL STUFF

MakeUseOf: 6 Gamified Apps to Boost Your Productivity. “Gamified applications are tools that add game elements to your daily tasks to boost engagement and productivity. Adding game elements like reward systems, competition, challenges, or storylines to non-game tasks make them more fun, enjoyable and achievable, empowering you to do more in less time.”

Hongkiat: 10 Websites to Edit Music and Audio Files Online . “If you have infrequent audio editing needs and you’re looking for a quick audio editing tool that works on the fly, then your best choice would be to go for free online audio editors. Here is a collection of the best free online audio editors that allow you to do basic as well as advanced audio editing and recording right in the browser.”

Lifehacker: How to Get Live Subtitles on Your FaceTime Calls. “Have you ever wanted live subtitles during your FaceTime calls? Navi, a companion app for FaceTime, lets you add it on your iPhone, iPad, and your Mac, too. The app makes clever use of Apple’s SharePlay feature to show you live subtitles during your video calls with your friends, yet another good reason to use FaceTime.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Mashable: Blurry photos are cool now. “Seeing blurry photos on social media is nothing new. Non-tech savvy people who struggle to take good photos have been posting them for years, and they were ubiquitous in the early days of Instagram when phone cameras were far less advanced. But nowadays, people are purposely posting blurry photos to infuse their personal feeds with a certain essence. Rather than serving ‘poor quality photo’ vibes, intentionally posted blurry photos serve ‘I’m having too much fun and living life so fast that a camera can’t even capture me’ vibes.”

Stuff New Zealand: Iwi wants to protect and own their memories with archive partnership. Iwi is a way to describe a particular kind of Māori group. I think in America a similar word would be tribe. “Ngāi Tahu has leased state-of-the-art office and archive space to store its historical papers and research the history of the tribe in a bid to ‘own their own memory’. The iwi has taken out a three-year lease on space in an Archives New Zealand building in Christchurch. The building houses hundreds of boxes of iwi files dating back to the 1940s, with 4000 boxes of files being sorted for possible future storage at the facility.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

New York Times: Last Known Slave Ship Is Remarkably Well Preserved, Researchers Say. “As much as two-thirds of the original structure remains, including the hold below the main deck where 110 people were imprisoned during the ship’s final, brutal journey from Benin to Mobile in 1860. The researchers said it was possible that DNA could be extracted from the sealed, oxygen-free hull, which is filled with silt. Barrels, casks and bags used to stow provisions for the captives could also be found inside, they said.”

Newswise: Are you talking to a chatbot? Would you like to?. “As artificial intelligence and natural language processing advance, we often don’t know if we are talking to a person or an AI-powered chatbot, says Tom Kelleher, Ph.D., an advertising professor in the University of Florida’s College of Journalism and Communications. What matters more than who (or what) is on the other side of the chat, Kelleher has found, is the perceived humanness of the interaction.”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

Tom’s Hardware: How to Build a Tweeting Weather Bot with Raspberry Pi. “When I first started getting into programming, one of my mentors built a project where he took an image every day, overlaid the current weather, and tweeted it. I remember at the time thinking there was no way I could ever build something that complicated. Fast forward to now, it’s a relatively simple thing to put together – and in my opinion, a great starter project for someone getting involved with programming. So with all those in mind, let’s build a twitter bot that takes a photo every day and tweets it out, using a Raspberry Pi.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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



December 27, 2021 at 01:26AM
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Sunday CoronaBuzz, December 26, 2021: 46 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Sunday CoronaBuzz, December 26, 2021: 46 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.
By ResearchBuzz

Please get a booster shot. Please wear a mask when you’re inside with a bunch of people. Much love.

NEW RESOURCES – AREA-SPECIFIC

WPRI: RI health officials ‘concerned’ with lagging K-12 vaccination rates. “The R.I. Department of Health recently launched a new website showing vaccination rates among all eligible public-school students five years and older across the state. The most recently available data shows 48% of students are partially vaccinated and 42% are fully vaccinated. The rates are substantially lower than statewide trends, which is concerning to state health officials.”

UPDATES

Associated Press: Coronavirus dampens Christmas joy in biblical Bethlehem. “The biblical town of Bethlehem marked its second straight Christmas Eve under the shadow of the coronavirus — with small crowds and gray, gloomy weather dampening celebrations Friday in the traditional birthplace of Jesus.”

NBC News: Moviegoers felt a mix of old-fashioned joy, Covid-era anxiety in returning to theaters. “In the face of the omicron variant and renewed anxiety about breakthrough infections, many continue to feel that shuffling into a dark room with a bunch of strangers is too much of a risk, even if some theaters require proof of vaccination. The spread of the variant could spell more troubles for the industry in 2022. The financial hardships of the pandemic weigh heavily on much of the country, too. A night at the movies is a luxury that many simply cannot afford.”

New York Times: The Dreaded Return of the ‘Park Hang’. “‘The whole notion of having to stay away from people again is mind-numbing,’ said Manny Fidel, 29, a video producer who lives in Brooklyn. While he acknowledged the gravity of the current Covid-19 surge in New York City, which has set records for new cases and caused a mad dash for testing, Mr. Fidel also expressed fear that the Omicron variant would reduce social life in New York to its socially distant diminutives: stoop cocktails in puffer coats, long walks with friends to nowhere and a long line of park hangs.”

Houston Chronicle: Despite vaccines, more Texans died of COVID-19 in 2021 than in first year of pandemic . “The first case of COVID-19 in the United States was recorded in February 2020, and the pandemic was declared the following month. The current year began amid a winter surge of infections, which was followed by a rapid rise in vaccinations in the spring that later ebbed. The climbing death toll, public health experts said, is almost entirely driven by people who are unvaccinated. From mid-January through October, just 8 percent of Texas virus deaths were among inoculated residents.”

CORONAVIRUS MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

HuffPost: Anti-Vax Podcaster Reportedly On Ventilator For COVID After Attending Right-Wing Rally. “Podcast network Frog News reported in a message on the right-wing Telegram social media site that Doug Kuzma shared a photo a week ago posing with stores of dewormer Ivermectin and other chemicals after the three-day ReAwaken America event that featured Donald Trump’s short-time national security adviser and felon Michael Flynn. As of Saturday, Kuzma was ‘sedated and on a ventilator;’ he is ‘not conscious,’ noted a Frog News message. ‘Doug needs heavy, heavy prayers,’ the message added.”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

WWNY: New York sees largest population loss in history. “New York led the way this year in population loss. The U.S. Census Bureau put that loss at more than 319,000 New Yorkers between July 2020 and July 2021 – the highest of any state in the nation. Percentage-wise, it was 1.6 percent of the state’s population.”

Associated Press: COVID-19 Spike Worsens Africa’s Severe Poverty, Hunger Woes. “Nearly two years into a global pandemic, a new spike in coronavirus cases driven by the omicron variant is once again shuttering businesses, halting travel, reviving fears of overwhelmed hospitals and upending travel and holiday plans in countries around the world. But in Zimbabwe and other African nations, the virus’s resurgence is threatening the very survival of millions of people who have already been driven to the edge by a pandemic that has devastated their economies. When putting food on the table is not a given, worries about whether to gather with family members for the holiday or heed public announcements urging COVID-19 precautions take a back seat.”

Mashable: What will dating be like in 2022?. “Given the ride the last couple years have been, what will 2022 bring us in terms of finding love? Dating experts have a few predictions, including a continued use of virtual dating, a push towards serious relationships for some and non-monogamy for others, and an emphasis on mental health and vulnerability.”

Washington Post: The pandemic has caused nearly two years of collective trauma. Many people are near a breaking point.. “Nearly two years into a pandemic coexistent with several national crises, many Americans are profoundly tense. They’re snapping at each other more frequently, suffering from physical symptoms of stress and seeking methods of self-care. In the most extreme cases, they’re acting out their anger in public — bringing their internal struggles to bear on interactions with strangers, mental health experts said.”

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

BBC: Omicron: Rising numbers of NHS staff off work because of Covid. “Nearly 19,000 NHS staff were absent for Covid-related reasons on 19 December – up 54% on the previous week. A further 119,789 Covid infections were recorded in the UK on Thursday, setting another new record for daily cases.”

HEALTH CARE – PEDIATRICS

Washington Post: Omicron and children: Pediatric hospitals in parts of U.S. filling fast. “Ohio, Texas, Pennsylvania and New York have been hit particularly hard. As of Thursday, there were 1,987 confirmed or suspected pediatric covid-19 patients hospitalized nationally, a 31 percent jump in 10 days, according to a Washington Post analysis. Since the pandemic began, nearly 7.4 million children and adolescents have been infected, with 170,000 more added to that total in the last week alone, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics.”

HEALTH CARE – CAPACITY

NBC News: Hospitals in New York region say they’ve run out of antibody treatment for omicron variant. “Major hospitals in the New York region say they have stopped using monoclonal antibody therapies because they have run out of the one treatment that appears to be effective against the omicron variant of the coronavirus, leaving doctors without a vital tool to treat severely ill Covid-19 patients.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

CNET: CES 2022: Google latest to drop out over COVID-19, joining Intel, T-Mobile and more. “CES 2022 on Thursday lost Google, the latest company to confirm the cancellation of its in-person plans to be in Las Vegas for the tech trade show and to shift to a virtual presence. The search company and its sister company Waymo join T-Mobile, Intel, Lenovo, TikTok, Meta and many others making such a change over concerns about the uptick in coronavirus cases and the omicron variant.”

Stateline: Western ‘Zoom Towns’ Take Aim at Short-Term Rentals. “Even before the pandemic, the destination towns of the West had a shortage of affordable housing. Limited supply, the remote nature of some of the communities, zoning restrictions and even short construction seasons all contributed. But the COVID-19 pandemic accelerated everything, including the rise of so-called Zoom towns. Freed from physical offices, suddenly people could live, work and recreate in the vacation communities of the West, with few needs beyond a high-speed internet connection to do jobs that formerly required their presence in major cities.”

The Verge: Apple closes several stores due to COVID-19 outbreaks, encourages online shopping. “Over the last couple of weeks, several Apple Stores around the US have closed due to rising COVID-19 infections among staff members, and a report by Bloomberg lists seven locations in the US and Canada that have shut down operations within the last day or so. The Apple Stores listed include Dadeland and The Gardens Mall in Florida, Lenox Square in Atlanta, GA, Highland Village in Houston, TX, Summit Mall in Ohio, Pheasant Lane in New Hampshire, and Sainte-Catherine in Montreal, Canada.”

The Verge: Intel will put unvaccinated employees on unpaid leave. “Intel has reportedly notified employees that anyone who remains unvaccinated will need to get the COVID-19 vaccine or submit an exemption by January 4th. Otherwise, they face being put on unpaid leave, according to The Associated Press and The Oregonian.”

Associated Press: COVID: Airlines cancel dozens of flights over Christmas. ” At least three major airlines have reported canceling dozens of flights as illnesses largely tied to the omicron variant of COVID-19 take a toll on flight crew numbers during the busy holiday travel season.”

European Supermarket Magazine: US Meat Plants Relaxed Some COVID-19 Safety Protocols After Outbreaks: Unions . “Across the country, US meat and chicken plants that reported some of the country’s largest coronavirus outbreaks last year have eased or adjusted protective measures implemented near the start of the pandemic, according to interviews with ten plant employees, union officials and advocates for workers.”

Sky News: COVID-19: At least 4,500 flights around the world cancelled as coronavirus causes travel chaos. “Globally on Christmas Eve there were 2,401 flights cancelled and 10,000 delayed as operators struggled with staff absences. According to the online flight tracker FlightAware.com, 1,779 routes were not scheduled to operate as planned on Christmas Day, with a further 409 down on Boxing Day.”

UNITED STATES / UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

ProPublica: This Scientist Created a Rapid Test Just Weeks Into the Pandemic. Here’s Why You Still Can’t Get It.. “Irene Bosch developed a quick, inexpensive COVID-19 test in early 2020. The Harvard-trained scientist already had a factory set up. But she was stymied by an FDA process experts say made no sense.”

CNN: Biden to lift travel restrictions on southern African countries that were put in place due to Omicron. “The Biden administration is lifting restrictions on eight southern African countries that were put in place last month after the Omicron variant was first identified in South Africa, two administration officials told CNN.”

Washington Post: Coronavirus outbreak sidelines ship whose crew is fully immunized, Navy says. “A coronavirus outbreak aboard the USS Milwaukee, whose entire crew was ‘100 percent immunized,’ has forced the ship to remain in port after a scheduled stop in Cuba barely one week into its deployment, the Navy announced Friday.”

WORLD/COUNTRY GOVERNMENT

BBC: Covid: Ecuador makes vaccination mandatory for most citizens. “Ecuador has announced that the Covid-19 vaccine will be mandatory for most citizens, saying the measure is needed because of a rise in infections and the spread of variants such as Omicron. The health ministry said there were enough doses to ‘immunise the entire population’. Those with a medical justification will be exempt.”

Reuters: Chinese officials punished over COVID outbreak that led to Xian lockdown. “Officials in the northwestern Chinese city of Xian are facing punishment after a COVID-19 outbreak led to the lockdown of its 13 million residents, authorities said on Friday, as the number of new cases declined. All domestic flights out of Xian and most trains originating from the city scheduled for Friday were cancelled. Officials in Xian, which is famed for its terracotta warriors buried with China’s first emperor, say the outbreak has been traced to the arrival of a plane from Pakistan.”

AFP: Dutch PM Admits Making ‘Mistakes’ in Covid Communication, Says ‘Failed to Convince People About Basic Measures’. “Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte admitted to making communication ‘mistakes’ in handling the pandemic, in an interview published Friday as his country braced for second Christmas under lockdown.”

Reuters: S.Africa scraps isolation for those without COVID symptoms. ” South Africans without symptoms of COVID-19 will no longer need to isolate or test if they have been in contact with a positive case, the government announced on Friday, saying developments around the virus justified a shift from containment measures towards mitigation.”

BBC: Covid-19: New rules in force for three UK nations. “New Covid restrictions have come into force in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland as the nations try to halt the surge in infections. All three nations have introduced curbs on the hospitality and leisure industry, resumed social distancing rules and put limits on the size of gatherings. Boris Johnson has not announced any further restrictions in England.”

STATE GOVERNMENT

State of California: Governor Newsom Announces New Actions to Protect Californians from COVID-19 . “Governor Gavin Newsom today announced new booster requirements and testing measures to better protect all Californians as the Omicron variant becomes the dominant COVID-19 strain in the nation. The COVID-19 booster requirement for health care workers will mitigate potential staffing shortages while helping to safeguard the state’s hospital capacity and protect the health and safety of Californians.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

Route Fifty: More Cities Move to Adopt Vaccine Requirements for Indoor Spaces. “Washington, D.C., Boston, Chicago and Philadelphia are among the places that announced these types of measures in recent days. Other places, including New York City, King County, Washington, where Seattle is located, San Francisco and Los Angeles, already had requirements along these lines in place. The new mandates come as the highly contagious omicron variant of Covid-19 is surging.”

City of New York: Mayor de Blasio Announces Scaled Back New Year’s Eve Times Square Celebration. “Mayor de Blasio today announced details for a scaled back Times Square New Year’s Eve, with additional protections in place to ensure a safe celebration. In addition to requiring proof of full vaccination with valid photo identification and being fully outdoors, attendees will also be required to wear masks. Viewing areas will be filled with fewer people to allow for social distancing.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS – CELEBRITIES/FAMOUS

NBC News: 3 members of K-pop superstars BTS test positive for Covid-19. ” Three members of the K-pop group BTS on Saturday tested positive for Covid-19 following their return to South Korea from the band’s first pandemic-era concerts in the United States, their management company Big Hit Music said. Rapper RM, 27, and vocalist Jin, 29, were diagnosed with Covid-19 a day after Suga, a songwriter and rapper for the seven-member group, tested positive.”

SPORTS

24/7 Sports: Hawaii Bowl canceled after Rainbow Warriors withdraw, citing COVID-19 cases, transfers and injuries. “The Hawaii Bowl has been canceled after Hawaii was forced to withdraw from the game due to a combination of COVID-19 cases, transfers and injuries, it was announced Thursday night. The game was to pit the Rainbow Warriors against the Memphis Tigers Friday at Clarence T. C. Ching Athletics Complex in Honolulu.”

K-12 EDUCATION

NPR: There’s a surge of mental health issues for kids back for in-school learning. “For kids around the country, this school year was supposed to bring a return to normalcy, ending the isolation and stress of remote or hybrid learning. But halfway through the year, schools and health care providers say they’re seeing a massive rise in students struggling with mental and behavioral health problems. NPR’s Rhitu Chatterjee has the story.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

KABC: USC students will stay remote for now amid omicron surge. “The explosion in COVID-19 omicron cases is leading to the change. Los Angeles County on Friday announced nearly 10,000 new COVID-19 cases in one day, the highest number in 11 months. The spike is driven by the highly-contagious omicron variant, as well as holiday travel and get-togethers.”

HEALTH

BBC: Omicron: Half of colds will be Covid, warn UK researchers. “If you have a sore throat, runny nose and a headache there is a good chance it will be Covid, warn UK researchers. The Zoe Covid study team has been tracking the pandemic using feedback from the general public, and estimates half of people with cold-like symptoms actually have Covid.”

BBC: Parosmia: Coping with distorted smell and taste at Christmas. “Christmas is a cruel holiday for sufferers of Covid-induced parosmia. The condition, which causes smell and taste distortions, can mean tucking into a roast turkey with all the trimmings becomes a nauseating nightmare. But as more research is done and our understanding improves, is there hope for those whose festivities were plunged into repugnant ruin?”

NBC Washington: Long COVID Patients Are ‘Terrified’ of Omicron. “Emerging research about omicron has so far been cautiously reassuring: Despite its ability to spread at a dizzying pace, the illness it causes appears to be milder overall, at least among the vaccinated and those who have received the booster shot. Such encouraging data, however, are meaningless to people with long Covid-19: those who have suffered from its symptoms for months to more than a year following their initial infection.”

TECHNOLOGY / INTERNET

Mashable: Thought virtual watch parties were dead? 2022 would like to have a word.. “I’m not happy that we have to rely on virtual watch party software again and I assume you aren’t either. But if we have to deal with constantly shifting circumstances, it’s good to keep in mind the growing list of digital tools we have at our disposal to make the most of a bad situation. These apps even have utility outside the context of a pandemic, as loved ones can be physically far apart for any number of reasons while still wanting to experience movies together.”

Ubergizmo: A COVID-19 Home Testing Kit Was Hacked To Display Fake Results. “Thanks to technology, we are seeing an increasing number of home testing kits for various diseases that can be uploaded onto our phones and then uploaded online to our doctors, so that they can monitor our health remotely and get the latest information. It sounds convenient, but there is also some danger to that. A good example would be recently, F-Secure researcher Ken Gannon discovered a vulnerability in Ellume’s nasal swab test, which is a home testing kit for COVID-19.”

Texas A&M Today: When Churches Closed, Religious Leaders Turned To Tech. “One Methodist pastor had to lend her own digital camera to the church, which had no digital resources. Another duct taped a borrowed smartphone to a ladder in order to stream a service. An Episcopal priest from Indianapolis described feelings of exhaustion and fatigue, saying that her online services fell flat and ‘wasn’t the job I signed up for.’ They are among the pastors, volunteers and staff members who provided insight into their experiences with technology during the COVID-19 pandemic. Heidi A Campbell, a professor at Texas A&M University who studies media and religion, prepared a report issued last month on their decision-making processes and the sources of tension or challenges they faced.”

RESEARCH

IANS: COVID-19: Booster Shot Protection Fades Within 10 Weeks Against Omicron, says New Study. “While countries are racing to administer booster shots to protect against the Omicron variant of COVID-19, a new study released by the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) has shown that protection wanes even after taking the third dose of a vaccine within 10 weeks.”

OUTBREAKS

Sentinel & Enterprise: Massachusetts reports highest daily coronavirus case count of pandemic for second straight day. “The daily count of 9,042 new COVID-19 cases is the highest daily case total of the pandemic, breaking Wednesday’s tally of 7,817 cases. The prior record high before this week was Jan. 8’s count of 7,635 cases. The daily average percent positivity has been surging in recent weeks. The average percent positivity is now 7.6%. The rate for Thursday’s report was 8.07%.”

OH THAT’S SO NICE

Washington Post: A man strung Christmas lights from his home to his neighbor’s to support her. The whole community followed.. “Kim Morton was home watching a movie with her daughter when she received a text from her neighbor who lives directly across the road. He told her to peek outside. Matt Riggs had hung a string of white Christmas lights, stretching from his home to hers in the Rodgers Forge neighborhood, just north of the Baltimore city line. He also left a tin of homemade cookies on her doorstep. The lights, he told her, were meant to reinforce that they were always connected despite their pandemic isolation.”

OPINION

The Mary Sue: Dear TV Shows, It’s Very Weird to Watch You Pretend Like COVID-19 Is Over. “When these characters talk about the pandemic in the past tense and eat in crowded indoor restaurants and sit shoulder to shoulder at a children’s music recital without a mask in sight, that is—outside of a few major cities that still have enforced mandates—what is happening all across the country. It is very hard to separate that infuriating reality that we all have to deal with daily from that of the show, where this behavior is supposed to be perfectly fine and safe.”

RELIGION

NPR: For some secular Jews, their pandemic hobby has been learning Yiddish. “From noshing to schmoozing to schlepping, many Americans know a handful of Yiddish words. But outside of ultra-Orthodox Judaism, few people actually speak Yiddish as a language. And yet, Deena Prichep reports the pandemic has created a wave of new Yiddish learning.”

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December 26, 2021 at 08:20PM
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