Pushing edgy people to the fringes of the internet silences free speech and silos discourse – The Post Millennial

It is virtually an axiom of intellectual discourse that voices considered too dangerous or disruptive to be allowed on television, radio, and in print tend to maintain a high demand for their material. The goal of removing the opposition entirely from mainstream platforms is to censor discourse and to close off avenues of debate or inquiry.

Another effect is that discourse will be siloed, relegated to echo chambers, and neither side of the division line will hear the views of the other. The progressive left has entirely forgotten that free speech is essential and foundational to any healthy democracy.

Gavin McInnes Censored TV and the emergence of the social media alternative, Parler, are two platforms created as a way to combat YouTube and Twitter. Their aim is to give a platform for voices that have been forced out of the mainstream for what the progressive left would consider to be insensitive, extreme, or just plain dangerous.

The YouTube star Felix Kjellberg (PewDiePie) has had to fend off controversy after controversy for making insensitive remarks on his channel in the past. Insider reported in late May that "Kjellberg raised eyebrows with his unfiltered commentary and trolling in videos. He went on to make rape jokes for which he later apologized on Tumblr, to joke about joining ISIS (a stunt that got him briefly removed from Twitter), to call female gamers 'stupid Twitch thots,' to use racial slurs, and to post several videos featuring anti-semitic rhetoric and Nazi imagery."

No reasonable person could honestly conclude, based on his videos, that Kjellberg planned to join ISIS or that he really believed that rape was a hilarious event. The term for this kind of behavior by Kjellberg is transgressive, which is a method of veering from the norm in an effort to challenge and perhaps violate ones moral or ethical dispositions. In this way, Kjellberg is a genius. The outrage that has followed his over-the-top jokes fulfills the transgressive sentiment.

Those who have scoured Kjellbergs videos to find any and every instance of offense want to be offended. They are not fans, but opponents of dissent and discourse.

Kjellberg has a staggering 105 million YouTube subscribers. It turns out that many of his followers enjoyor at the very least dont mindKjellbergs potentially offensive humor. Kjellberg, however, apologized for the videos in question, which, in many ways, invalidates the legitimacy of transgressive humor and behavior. He did what so many others have done recently: bow and beg for mercy at the feet of the mob.

A different situation happened with Milo Yiannopoulous who has since migrated to Censored TV. He lost a book deal in 2017 and was effectively vanquished from the mainstream media because he made comments about his personal sexual relationship with an adult when he was still legally a minor. It is irrelevant whether what someone says is distasteful or tone deafsomeones freedom to say what they wish is within their First Amendment rights. Despite him merely using words to express an idea, his words were taken to be literal acts of violence.

The idea that words can be literal acts of violence is a nifty strategy developed by progressivesand has been spearheaded by its most loyal adherents within colleges and universities across the country, where young people are encouraged to be intolerant of opposing views.

Either progressive ideologues do not realize the double standard they have erected when it comes to free speech, or they just do not care. In almost every institution of higher learning in 21st America, progressive professors establish, uphold, and preach whole theories of criticism based around a number of French intellectuals. These are the same intellectuals who in 1977 signed a petition which asked for the decriminalization of all age of consent laws. This would have legalized the very relationship Yiannopolous came under fire for.

The names included on that list were some of the most notable French names of 20th century European discourse: Louis Aragon, Michel Foucault, Bernard Besret, Francis Ponge, Jean-Paul Sartre, Jean-Francois Lyotard, Jacques Ranciere, Jacques Derrida, Louis Althusser, Roland Barthes, Philippe Sollers, Alain Robbe-Grillet, Simone de Beauvoir, Gilles Deleuze, Felix Guattari, and Michel Leiris.

The bread and butter of postmodernist thoughta mid-to-late 20th century ideology taught in every gender studies, queer studies, and critical race theory class in Americawas at least partially pioneered by the likes of Foucault, Althusser, Derrida, and Deleuze. The same group of people who refuse to hear what Yiannopoulos has to say are the very same people who admire and endorse the ideas put forth by these French libertines.

This is an indicator that it is not so much what is being said that progressives take issue with, but who is saying it. This is made clear not only by the example above, but with the recent debacle involving American comedian Nick Cannon.

CBS News recently reported that Cannon spoke on a podcast about how "Jews have stolen Black peoples identity as true Hebrews. Cannon also imply[ed] that those with light skin are inferior." The news outlet continued by saying that "Cannon referred to teachings from Louis Farrakhan, who is considered anti-Semitic by the Southern Poverty Law Center, and a conspiracy theory about the Rothschild family deemed anti-Semitic by the Anti-Defamation League."

The BBC reported would not fire Cannon from his host post on The Masked Singer, US. Mike Cernovich said "Nick Cannon brought up a belief millions of black Americans have. These views might offend you or outrage you or whatever, but censoring people isnt the answer. Open debate and discussion are."

It is true that Cannon should not be canceled, but it begs the question of why Cannon was let off the hook while so many others have not been so fortunate.

NBA announcer Grant Napear, who reportedly lost his job for saying "All Lives Matter." All Lives Matter "is seen by many as mocking the Black Lives Matter movement, which began in 2013 as a campaign against systemic racism and violence toward black people." Napear basically lost his job for something significantly less harmful than Cannons words, but again, it depends on who is relaying a given message and not what the message actually is.

UCLA professor Gordon Klein was removed from his post after students criticized him for not postponing an exam amid the protests and riots that broke out in response to the death of George Floyd. Professors have authority over exam policies, yet Klein was demonized as being racially insensitive for not bending to the whims of his students.

The Federalist reported on Stan Wischnowski, the top editor for the Philadelphia Inquirer, who was "forced to resign over a headline of an architecture column that read, 'Buildings Matter, Too,' which ran after scores of buildings in downtown Philly had been destroyed by rioters."

Parler has acted as a sort of bastion for free speech, drawing the likes of McInnes, Yiannopoulos, and Laura Loomerall of whom have been permanently banned from Twitter and other platforms for their remarks. The recent additions to Parler's platform have been Katie Hopkins, Carpe Donktum, and Graham Linehan, who have all been booted from Twitter for saying the wrong thing. Parler gained half a million new users after Twitter decided to go after conservative voices, and it has been gaining traction ever since.

Free speech does not mean all speech much adhere to a given set of moral of ethical principlesthat is what makes free speech, well, free. Our First Amendment protects people who say wrong things, offensive things, absurd things, and hurtful things. While there is no doubt that our right to freedom of speech is alive and well, it is unclear who gets to use it with impunity and who will be canceled or mobbed as a result.

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Pushing edgy people to the fringes of the internet silences free speech and silos discourse - The Post Millennial

Quantum Computing Technologies Market 2020 Top Trend, Size and Growth, Key Insights, Segmentation, Key Regions And Future Forecast Till 2026 – Owned

This report focuses on the global Quantum Computing Technologies status, future forecast, growth opportunity, key market and key players. The study objectives are to present the Quantum Computing Technologies development in North America, Europe, China, Japan, Southeast Asia, India and Central & South America.

Access the PDF sample of the report @https://www.orbisresearch.com/contacts/request-sample/4571360

The key players covered in this studyAirbus GroupCambridge Quantum ComputingIBMGoogle Quantum AI LabMicrosoft Quantum ArchitecturesNokia Bell LabsAlibaba Group Holding LimitedIntel CorporationToshiba

Market segment by Type, the product can be split intoSoftwareHardware

Make an enquiry of this report @https://www.orbisresearch.com/contacts/enquiry-before-buying/4571360

Market segment by Application, split intoGovernmentBusinessHigh-TechBanking & SecuritiesManufacturing & LogisticsInsuranceOther

Market segment by Regions/Countries, this report coversNorth AmericaEuropeChinaJapanSoutheast AsiaIndiaCentral & South America

Browse the complete report @https://www.orbisresearch.com/reports/index/global-quantum-computing-technologies-market-size-status-and-forecast-2020-2026

The study objectives of this report are:To analyze global Quantum Computing Technologies status, future forecast, growth opportunity, key market and key players.To present the Quantum Computing Technologies development in North America, Europe, China, Japan, Southeast Asia, India and Central & South America.To strategically profile the key players and comprehensively analyze their development plan and strategies.To define, describe and forecast the market by type, market and key regions.

In this study, the years considered to estimate the market size of Quantum Computing Technologies are as follows:History Year: 2015-2019Base Year: 2019Estimated Year: 2020Forecast Year 2020 to 2026For the data information by region, company, type and application, 2019 is considered as the base year. Whenever data information was unavailable for the base year, the prior year has been considered.

Table of Contents

Chapter One: Report Overview

1.1 Study Scope

1.2 Key Market Segments

1.3 Players Covered: Ranking by Quantum Computing Technologies Revenue

1.4 Market Analysis by Type

1.4.1 Global Quantum Computing Technologies Market Size Growth Rate by Type: 2020 VS 2026

1.4.2 Software

1.4.3 Hardware

1.5 Market by Application

1.5.1 Global Quantum Computing Technologies Market Share by Application: 2020 VS 2026

1.5.2 Government

1.5.3 Business

1.5.4 High-Tech

1.5.5 Banking & Securities

1.5.6 Manufacturing & Logistics

1.5.7 Insurance

1.5.8 Other

1.6 Study Objectives

1.7 Years Considered

Chapter Two: Global Growth Trends by Regions

2.1 Quantum Computing Technologies Market Perspective (2015-2026)

2.2 Quantum Computing Technologies Growth Trends by Regions

2.2.1 Quantum Computing Technologies Market Size by Regions: 2015 VS 2020 VS 2026

2.2.2 Quantum Computing Technologies Historic Market Share by Regions (2015-2020)

2.2.3 Quantum Computing Technologies Forecasted Market Size by Regions (2021-2026)

2.3 Industry Trends and Growth Strategy

2.3.1 Market Top Trends

2.3.2 Market Drivers

2.3.3 Market Challenges

2.3.4 Porters Five Forces Analysis

2.3.5 Quantum Computing Technologies Market Growth Strategy

2.3.6 Primary Interviews with Key Quantu

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Quantum Computing Technologies Market 2020 Top Trend, Size and Growth, Key Insights, Segmentation, Key Regions And Future Forecast Till 2026 - Owned

The Hyperion-insideHPC Interviews: Dr. Michael Resch Talks about the Leap from von Neumann: ‘I Tell My PhD Candidates: Go for Quantum’ – insideHPC

Dr. Michael M. Resch of the University of Stuttgart has professorships, degrees, doctorates and honorary doctorates from around the world, he has studied and taught in Europe and the U.S., but for all the work he has done in supercomputing for the past three-plus decades, he boils down his years in HPC to working with the same, if always improving, von Neumann architecture. Hes eager for the next new thing: quantum. Going to quantum computing, we have to throw away everything and we have to start anew, he says. This is a great time.

In This Update. From The HPC User Forum Steering Committee

By Steve Conway and Thomas Gerard

After the global pandemic forced Hyperion Research to cancel the April 2020 HPC User Forum planned for Princeton, New Jersey, we decided to reach out to the HPC community in another way by publishing a series of interviews with members of the HPC User Forum Steering Committee. Our hope is that these seasoned leaders perspectives on HPCs past, present and future will be interesting and beneficial to others. To conduct the interviews, Hyperion Research engaged insideHPC Media.

We welcome comments and questions addressed to Steve Conway, sconway@hyperionres.com or Earl Joseph, ejoseph@hyperionres.com.

This interview is with Michael M. Resch. Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. mult. He is dean of the faculty for energy-process and biotechnology of the University of Stuttgart, director of the High Performance Computing Center Stuttgart (HLRS), the Department for High Performance Computing, and the Information Center (IZUS), all at the University of Stuttgart, Germany. He was an invited plenary speaker at SC07. He chairs the board of the German Gauss Center for Supercomputing (GCS) and serves on the advisory councils for Triangle Venture Capital Group and several foundations. He is on the advisory board of the Paderborn Center for Parallel Computing (PC2). He holds a degree in technical mathematics from the Technical University of Graz, Austria and a Ph.D. in engineering from the University of Stuttgart. He was an assistant professor of computer science at the University of Houston and was awarded honorary doctorates by the National Technical University of Donezk (Ukraine) and the Russian Academy of Science.

He was interviewed by Dan Olds, HPC and big data consultant at Orionx.net.

The HPC User Forum was established in 1999 to promote the health of the global HPC industry and address issues of common concern to users. More than 75 HPC User Forum meetings have been held in the Americas, Europe and the Asia-Pacific region since the organizations founding in 2000.

Olds: Hello, Im Dan Olds on behalf of Hyperion Research and insideHPC, and today Im talking to Michael Resch, who is an honorable professor at the HPC Center in Stuttgart, Germany. How are you, Michael?

Resch: I am fine, Dan. Thanks.

Olds: Very nice to talk to you. I guess lets start at the beginning. How did you get involved in HPC in the first place?

Resch: That started when I was a math student and I was invited to work as a student research assistant and, by accident, that was roughly the month when a new supercomputer was coming into the Technical University of Graz. So, I put my hands on that machine and I never went away again.

Olds: You sort of made that machine yours, I guess?

Resch: We were only three users. There were three user groups and I was the most important user of my user group because I did all the programming.

Olds: Fantastic, thats a way to make yourself indispensable, isnt it?

Resch: In a sense.

Olds: So, can you kind of summarize your HPC background over the years?

Resch: I started doing blood flow simulations, so I at first looked into this very traditional Navier-Stokes equation that was driving HPC for a long time. Then I moved on to groundwater flow simulations pollution of groundwater, tunnel construction work, and everything until after like five years I moved to the University of Stuttgart, where I started to work with supercomputers, more focusing on the programming side, the performance side, than on the hardware side. This is sort of my background in terms of experience.

In terms of education, I studied a mixture of mathematics, computer science and economics, and then did a Ph.D. in engineering, which was convenient if youre working in Navier-Stokes equations. So, I try to bring all of these things together to make an impact in HPC.

Olds: What are some of the biggest changes youve seen in HPC over your career?

Resch: Well, the biggest change is probably that when I started, as I said, there were three user groups. These were outstanding experts in their field, but supercomputing was nothing for the rest of the university. Today, everybody is using HPC. Thats probably the biggest change, that we are moving from something where you had one big system and a few experts around that system, and you moved to a larger number of systems and tens of thousands of experts working with them.

Olds: And, so, the systems have to get bigger, of course.

Resch: Well, certainly, they have to get bigger. And they have to get, I would say, more usable. Thats another feature, that now things are more hidden from the user, which makes it easier to use them. But at the same time, it takes away some of the performance. There is this combination of hiding things away from the user and then the massive parallelism that we saw, and thats the second most important thing that I think we saw in the last three decades. That has made it much more difficult to get high sustained performance.

Olds: Where do you see HPC headed in the future? Is there anything that has you particularly excited or concerned?

Resch: [Laughs] Im always excited and concerned. Thats just normal. Thats what happens when you go into science and thats normal when you work with supercomputers. I see, basically, two things happening. The first thing is that people will merge everything that has to do with data and everything that has to do with simulation. I keep saying its data analytics, machine learning, artificial intelligence. Its sort of a development from raw data to very intelligent handling of data. And these data-intensive things start to merge with simulation, like we see people trying to understand what they did over the last 20 years by employing artificial intelligence to work its way through the data trying to find what we have already done and what should we do next, things like that.

The second thing that is exciting is quantum computing. Its exciting because its out of the ordinary, in a sense. You might say that over the last 32 years the only thing I did was work with improved technology and improved methods and improved algorithms or whatever, but I was still working in the same John von Neumann architecture concept. Going to quantum computing we have to throw away everything and we have to start anew. This is a great time. I keep telling my Ph.D. candidates, go for quantum computing. This is where you make an impact. This is where you have a wide-open field of things you can explore and this is what is going to make the job exciting for the next 10, 12, 15 years or so.

Olds: Thats fantastic and your enthusiasm for this really comes through. Your enthusiasm for HPC, for the new computing methods, and all that. And, thank you so much for taking the time.

Resch: It was a pleasure. Thank you.

Olds: Thank you, really appreciate it.

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The Hyperion-insideHPC Interviews: Dr. Michael Resch Talks about the Leap from von Neumann: 'I Tell My PhD Candidates: Go for Quantum' - insideHPC

Impact of Covid-19 on Healthcare Cloud Computing 2020-2027 with Focusing Key players like Athena Health Inc, Care Cloud Corporation, CareStream Health…

The latest market analysis report on the Healthcare Cloud Computing market performs industry diagnostic as a way to accumulate valuable data into the business environment of the Healthcare Cloud Computing market for the forecast period 2019 2026. The subject matter experts behind the research have collected vital statistics on the market share, size and growth as a way to help stakeholders, business owners and field marketing personnel identify the areas to reduce costs, improve sales, explore new opportunities and streamline their processes. Unbiased perspective on intangible aspects such as key challenges, threats, new entrants as well as strengths and weaknesses of the prominent vendors too are discussed in this market intelligence report.

This is the most recent report inclusive of the COVID-19 effects on the functioning of the market. It is well known that some changes, for the worse, were administered by the pandemic on all industries. The current scenario of the business sector and pandemics impact on the past and future of the industry are covered in this report.

In market segmentation by manufacturers, the report covers the following companies-

Agfa -Gevaert N.V., Athena Health Inc., Care Cloud Corporation, CareStream Health Inc., Dell Inc., IBM Corporation, Oracle Corporation, Microsoft Corporation, GE Healthcare

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Coverage of critical data on investment feasibility, return on investment, demand and supply, import and export, consumption volume and production capability aim at supporting the business owners in multiple growth phases including the initial stages, product development and prioritizing potential geography. All valuable data assessed in the report are presented through charts, tables, and graphic images.

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A thorough diligence and probe into market segmentation, customer preference, production capability and gross margin are discussed with the aim to ensure business owners are positioned to successes. The study considers, in particular, the impact of technology innovation, recent collaborations and product launches for the forecast period of 2019 2026. Assessment of various factors on a targets ability to meet the forecast results forms the basis of evaluation of this market intelligence report on Healthcare Cloud Computing market.

The research provides answers to the following key questions:

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Browse complete Healthcare Cloud Computing report description And Full TOC @ https://www.marketographics.com/industry-reports/healthcare-cloud-computing-market

To summarize, the global Healthcare Cloud Computing market report studies the contemporary market to forecast the growth prospects, challenges, opportunities, risks, threats, and the trends observed in the market that can either propel or curtail the growth rate of the industry. The market factors impacting the global sector also include provincial trade policies, international trade disputes, entry barriers, and other regulatory restrictions.

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Impact of Covid-19 on Healthcare Cloud Computing 2020-2027 with Focusing Key players like Athena Health Inc, Care Cloud Corporation, CareStream Health...

New College Institute to Offer Amazon Web Services Training in Southern Virginia – GlobeNewswire

Martinsville, Va, July 28, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- New College Institute (NCI) is pleased to announce a collaborative effort with Amazon Web Services (AWS) to providecloud computing skills development and job training through the AWS re/Start program. The first AWS re/Start cohort at NCI is scheduled to begin in Fall 2020. NCI and AWS will host informational AWS re/Start webinars on August 5 to provide details on employer, partnership, and participant opportunities.

This is an amazing opportunity for job seekers in Southern and Southwestern Virginia, said Karen Jackson, interim executive director of NCI. We are proud to be working with AWS to provide training that will empower more people in Virginias rural communities to learn new, in-demand skills, and find employment in a high-growth industry.

AWS re/Start prepares learners for entry-level cloud roles, such as cloud operations, site reliability, infrastructure support, and technical adjacent business support functions. Each cohort of learners in the AWS re/Start program is supported by professional mentors and accredited trainers, and completes a 12-week training featuring real-world scenario-based learning, hands-on labs, and coursework. The program also provides learners with resume and interview coaching to prepare for employer meetings and interviews.

NCIs AWS re/Start program willprimarily be available to unemployedand underemployed populations in Southern and Southwestern Virginia.Applicants from other areas of Virginia will be considered on a space available basis.According to theVirginia Employment Commission, almost 400,000 Virginians are currently unemployed due to COVID-19.In addition, according to Emsi labor market data from July 2019 to June 2020, Virginia has the third largest number of cloud related job postings in the United States with almost 300K cloud related jobs posted.NCI is proud to create opportunities for more people, from more backgrounds, to engage in workforce training in such a high-demand, high-growth arena. AWS and the AWS Workforce Development team continue to focus on opportunities to support unemployed and underemployed individuals in Virginia.

The Information Technology (IT) industry is facing a substantial talent deficit that can only be addressed by attracting more Americans into cloud computing and IT careers, including those without traditional technology educations or experience. The AWS re/Start program is a springboard to help Virginians prepare for and successfully enter entry-level careers in cloud computing. 1901 Group is excited to leverage AWS re/Start and NCI to help identify, attract, and hire more Virginians to fill our demand for cloud computing talent, especially at our Enterprise IT Operations Centers in Southwest Virginia, said Brendan Walsh SVP Partner Relations at 1901 Group.

To overcome this systematic supply versus demand situation, cloud talent must be cultivated from non-traditional sources. AWS re/Start brings net-new talent into the cloud ecosystem by skilling unemployed and underemployed individuals with little to no technology background and preparing them to launch a cloud career, saidTejas Vashi, AWSre/Start Global Team Lead, AWS Training & Certification, Amazon Web Services, Inc.

For more information or to register for theAWS re/Start program, visithttp://www.newcollegeinstitute.org/, or contact Brian Stanleybstanley@newcollegeinstitute.orgor (276) 403-5605.

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New College Institute to Offer Amazon Web Services Training in Southern Virginia - GlobeNewswire

Experts Advocate Adoption of Cloud Computing for Businesses – THISDAY Newspapers

Emma Okonji

Technology experts have advised businesses to enhance the adoption of cloud computing.

They explained that cloud computing has the potential to accelerate growth of the about 41 million SMEs in the country, and could enable rapid governance on the part of government.

The experts gave the advice at a recent webinar hosted by CyberCloud, an indigenous service provider, with the theme: The New Normal: Future of Cloud Computing in Nigeria Post COVID-19.

While advising businesses to device means to continue serving their customers adequately, the experts concluded that one clear cut platform through which it could be achieved was through cloud computing.

Some of those in attendance included the Director General, National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA), Kashifu Inuwa; Managing Director, RackCentre, Ayotunde Coker; Partner Technology Advisory, KPMG, John Anyanwu; Chief Information Officer, First City Monument Bank, Collins Osugo and National Coordinator, NITDA, Barrister Kasim Sodangi.

According to Coker, Cloud Computing are services that you consume over the internet, regardless of its location. Its a service you can subscribe to and consume as you require, you scale as you grow and you pay as you go.

He further stated that CyberCloud and Rack center have the capacity to provide all cloud services needed by the government, corporate bodies and individuals.

Speaking on the development, Anyanwu said Cloud services have always been a part of our lives without us knowing it.Anyanwu said several people have been using the likes of Google Mail, Yahoo, and so many services that are in the cloud and we have been enjoying these services for our personal lives without even knowing what we are using.

He further said Cloud gives a huge opportunity for us to facilitate innovation with low capital investment.

Describing how Cloud Services are utilised by the government, Sodangi said as far back as 2013, NITDA issued a guideline for National Content Development in Information Technology (IT). According to him, one of the guidelines specifically speaks to the retention and domestication of Data Services of the government needs rising from the operation of government and data that is owned by government must be hosted locally.

He said Cloud services will sufficiently improve how services are delivered in Nigeria and change the face of the public sector if it is understood and implemented as it ought to be.

Osugo stated that Banks have been in the forefront of Cloud Computing, but he however said for banks to have the confidence to host and work with local providers, there are certain criteria that needed to be met.

He added, Once the government plays its significant role in making sure adequate infrastructures are in place and the companies like KPMG, VMware accesses the risk and ensure that the skills required to manage these services are also in place, then the skys the limit.

VMware Senior Manager Cloud Business, Dave Funnell, said Interrogate your cloud provider because not all cloud providers are equal and can deliver the services you require. However, the certification Vmware provides Cybercloud should help build the element of trust and trust is key because Cloud Computing is the way to accelerate a business.He further said that Cloud remained an enabler to fast forward to the future and that working with a cloud provider that is reputable could really enable businesss.

From his perspective, the MD, Cyberspace Limited, concluded by urging the attendees to subscribe to the flexible services that CyberCloud has to offer.

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Experts Advocate Adoption of Cloud Computing for Businesses - THISDAY Newspapers

Is Hong Kong the most cloud-ready market in APAC? – Tech Wire Asia

A city in the clouds. Source: Shutterstock

Awareness around the enabling role that cloud computing provides us not only in the private and public sectors, but in our everyday lives has never been higher.

Across APAC, cloud adoption has been on an uptrend even in territories that have been traditionally slow to embrace new internet services, and that increased acceptance is reflected in the 2020 Cloud Readiness Index, by the Asia Cloud Computing Association (ACCA).

The Index has become a definitive indicator on the market preparedness to adopt cloud computing tools and services in APAC over the last decade. Rankings weigh up a number of factors to determine nationwide readiness including International Connectivity, Broadband Quality, Data Center Risk, Cybersecurity, Privacy, Government Regulatory Environment, among more, and a sustainable practices criteria called Power Grid, Green Policy, and Sustainability.

In the 2020, Hong Kong has reemerged as the most cloud-ready state in APAC, reclaiming the top spot from Singapore. Hong Kong received a total score of 81.9 out of 100, while Singapore dropped to second in APAC with a total score of 81.5.

Interestingly, both Hong Kong and Singapore rank higher than the UK (which would achieve a 79.7 score using the same criteria) and the US, which at 76.4 would rank behind third-placed New Zealand in APAC.

New Zealand scored an overall 77.1, maintaining its third position from the previous Cloud Readiness Index, but its neighbor Australia dropped slightly in overall score to seventh in APAC. Rounding out the top five in the region is Taiwan and South Korea with total scores of 75.2 and 72.7, respectively.

Taiwan takes the spot of Japan, the previous fourth overall in APAC but dropping to sixth in 2020. Japan rated only 1.7 out of 10 in the first criteria, International Connectivity, the second-lowest out of the 14 countries polled after eleventh-ranked Philippines (an abysmal 1.2 in International Connectivity, 55.3 overall).

International Connectivity tracks how much bandwidth capacities have grown in each nation between 2018 and 2020. Japan was not the only digitally matured economy to struggle in this metric, as China (1.8) and South Korea (2.6) also scored poorly as bandwidth connectivity is already quite widespread throughout these countries.

Another interesting point of note is that Singapore which according to Deloitte has the best cybersecurity preparedness in Asia Pacific as well rated an impressive 9.9 out of 10 when it comes to Broadband Quality, and 9.0 and above in Privacy, Government Regulatory Environment, and Intellectual Property Protection, alongside Cybersecurity.

Those individual scores align well with the international perception of Singapores friendly regulatory environment for doing business, ahead of Hong Kong on several individual counts. But Hong Kongs consistent good grades across all criteria snagged it the top spot as the most consistent cloud-ready economy on the Index.

The ACCAs report findings also noted many APAC nations are actively looking into emerging tech such as artificial intelligence (AI), internet of things (IoT), and augmented reality as technologies that could complement cloud computing capability and help them leapfrog more matured economies in the near future.

Commenting on the top performers who all ranked highly for Government Regulatory Environment, the ACCA reports that encouraging free and secure flow of data across borders and jurisdictions will help quicken the recovery of APAC economies post-pandemic, and spotlights data-driven businesses of all types and sizes to thrive in the new economic reality going forward.

Joe Devanesan| @thecrystalcrown

Joe's interest in tech began when, as a child, he first saw footage of the Apollo space missions. He still holds out hope to either see the first man on Mars, or Jetsons-style flying cars in his lifetime.

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Is Hong Kong the most cloud-ready market in APAC? - Tech Wire Asia

Cloud Computing in Healthcare Market Notable Developments, Upcoming Trends and Future Applications 2029 – News Monitoring

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‘Cocktail receptions on Zoom are sad.’ United Nations diplomacy in the age of Covid-19 – CNN

Now, Covid-19 is striking at the heart of the United Nations itself. And many diplomats, some speaking to CNN on condition of anonymity, believe that the old ways of doing business may be changed forever by the pandemic.

It's been a struggle on the world's highest diplomatic stage. How do you practice the fine arts of diplomacy when the conference rooms sit empty, meetings are via Zoom, and the entire staff is working from home?

"Obviously diplomacy needs contact. it needs presence," said Secretary General Antnio Guterres. We are doing our best through these virtual mechanisms."

"Of course, I miss intimacy ... hugging my dear colleagues or smiling with them together," Hungary's UN Ambassador Katalin Bogyay told CNN.

The pandemic has meant the UN-based diplomatic corps has had to function like uh, common civilians.

Gone are the face-to-face conversations that diplomats say can mean the difference in how a nation might vote or a resolution is written.

Typically, the 193 UN Ambassadors and deputies attend hundreds of receptions at each other's homes or offices annually, a tradition that has been upended.

The goal isn't to partake in fine food and drinks, said Belgium's UN Ambassador Marc Pecsteen de Buytswerve, but to meet a lot of people at the same time. "That is really useful as part of daily work," he said.

Now everything is virtual. "Cocktail receptions on Zoom are boring and sad," another diplomat conceded.

Listening while folding laundry

The Security Council's lack of unity on important issues, from Syria to Myanmar, has not improved in the pandemic era.

It took three months to even approve a resolution about the virus itself. And the recent vote on continuing the flow of humanitarian aid to Syria required five secret remote votes and concluded with many recriminations.

The diplomats do seem to have a coping mechanism that sometimes defies norms. After all they have to sit through numbing marathon hours of speeches during an average year.

French Ambassador Nicolas de Rivire said "as long as there is no vaccine we have to adjust to these realities."

Diplomats shelter inside their homes. and must adjust like all of us.

"You appreciate your own company," said Hungary's Bogyay. "I create every day as if it was a musical piece. I have etude, sonata or symphony days with some nocturnes depending on the topics we are covering."

Another diplomat confided that she and senior diplomats have shared tales of addressing the Security Council, the world's most significant international forum, in shorts and flip flops but with more formal attire on top.

This diplomat admitted "folding laundry" while listening to some conference calls. And, yes, diplomats, like many of us had to get up to speed on muting, unmuting and camera backgrounds.

Clearly, the stiff trappings of formal international behavior have slipped in the sudden work from home age.

UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric, after 4 months taking questions from home, began one daily press briefing with "reminder, I'm in a really lousy mood today."

Covid-19 hits home at UN

Russia initially opposed online meetings but eventually went along as the coronavirus cases mounted in New York. Russian Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia said early that the online experience was "more intense than normal life."

Other diplomats lamented the inability to read the body language of a colleague during face-to-face negotiations. "It's not the same as having a VTC conference," said Belgium's Pecsteen de Buytswerve. "You lack flexibility and nuance."

Hungary's Bogyay said it was a new type of diplomacy with everything now out in the open. "Lacking meta communication, you have to really have to concentrate on the screen and it is even more demanding physically and mentally than a normal day."

The United Nations could not escape the virus as it reported that 2 staffers died from coronavirus symptoms and more than 100 tested positive over the past six months

The organization told hundreds of staffers to work from home. A Security Council meeting on March 12 was marked by the technical jams that have afflicted many companies who have suddenly shifted to online gatherings. At one point, the panel heard its President at the time, Jos Singer from the Dominican Republic, pleading with ambassadors to shut off their microphones.

US Ambassador Kelly Craft took working from home to heart and retreated to her residence in Kentucky. A deputy had to finish her speech once when the picture failed. Still, dozens of Council meetings have occurred since and the current Council President, Germany's Heusgen, said "it was something very special for these last four months."

For all those who criticize the UN's performance, several diplomats thought the output has been improved. One diplomat not on the Security Council said "people are cutting to the chase more" and countries are finding new ways to work together.

Another diplomat noted: "UN people have been extremely productive with fewer meetings and without traveling. They are just working. They have no other choice."

Farewell to hugs and kisses?

The Security Council members did recently leave their residences to actually meet in person.

The Russians invited countries to their longtime compound in Glen Cove in Long Island, NY, where social distancing was observed on spacious outdoor grounds. Belgium's Ambassador said "everyone was very happy to see each other." There was barbeque and ambassadors discussed the upcoming goals.

But nowadays, simply calling a meeting has proved harder, diplomats said.

The UN General Assembly, with all 193 countries represented, can't meet in person because of social distancing. There needs to be pre-agreement that everyone is happy with a resolution for countries to say yes remotely by consensus.

At the Security Council, it takes more countries to find accord on the need to have a formal session, which is why some disputed issues end up being cast aside. "It's not great now dealing with substantive issues," a Security Council diplomat said.

Any in-person Council session also means hauling in interpreters and other UN staff who may count as essential services, but who do not live nearby in luxury apartments and would have to take riskier public transportation.

Still, Germany has joined with Russia in pressing for a return to UN headquarters as the virus toll dropped in New York. "You can do a lot virtually but nothing replaces person-to-person meetings," said Germany's Heusgen.

Four months after leaving the iconic Security Council chamber, diplomats returned to the UN building for a meeting on Colombia on July 14 -- but not to the Council chamber. To guard against the spread of the virus, the Council used a different, larger UN conference room, with far fewer aides and delegates allowed to watch in person.

The Security Council plans for a second meeting inside the UN on Tuesday to discuss Yemen. Not every country is enthusiastic.

British acting Ambassador to the UN Jonathan Allen said "while diplomacy works best in person, returning to meeting in the UN building involves an element of risk, including for the UN staff, so I think we have to try to find a balance."

France's De Rivire advised extreme caution, with the added guidance to all -- "Come with masks or stay away."

Regardless of the current concerns, some diplomats believe the UN, now in its 75th year, may actually change its ways because of the pandemic.

Hungary's Bogyay doesn't think hugs and kisses are returning anytime soon. "Actually I do not believe we will go back to where we left our life."

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'Cocktail receptions on Zoom are sad.' United Nations diplomacy in the age of Covid-19 - CNN

For Biotech Firms, Keeping Up With COVID-19 Testing Demand Is A Daily Struggle – KPBS

Aired 7/28/20 on KPBS News

Listen to this story by Tarryn Mento.

The first stop in a La Jolla laboratorys COVID-19 testing process is Bootes. Named for the star constellation and pronounced like the footwear, hes an automated liquid handling platform developed by the company Hamilton.

Bootes is the first in a series of automated machines at Helix laboratory running COVID tests from county sites, and they can be thrown off by inconsistencies. On a recent weekday, Bootes repeatedly refused to intake a batch of test tubes because a barcode on one vial was tough to read.

Lead clinical lab scientist Jason Nguyen, Bootes human handler, said the problem was hand sanitizer frequently used by county staff collecting specimens can sometimes cause the barcode to rub off.

We have some known issues with the alcohol, said Nguyen, who entered the sample ID manually, which always has to be verified by another person.

Machines like Bootes depend on uniformity to process thousands of COVID tests in a day, but their services and daily supplies needed to keep them running are in high demand across the country. Materials are becoming scarce a flashback to the pandemic's early weeks and some supply gaps are easier to navigate than others.

The problem trickled down to San Diego Countys public health lab earlier this month when a supplier couldnt provide its usual weekly shipment. Helix stepped in to help fill that gap and provide additional testing over the next few months. The genomics start-up that jumped into COVID testing as need grew in supplying the county with collection materials and processing for up to 2,000 daily tests.

David Becker, Helix vice president of quality and research and development, said uniformity is crucial when using machines like Bootes. That applies to something as seemingly insignificant as the size of the tube that carries swabs from testing sites to the lab.

You don't get a tube that is half an inch in diameter one day and three quarters of an inch in diameter the next day; that your robotic systems and your processes don't handle those very well, Becker said during an interview at the companys La Jolla lab.

It takes time and people to reprogram the machines for these fluctuations, but that doesnt mean theyre always manageable.

Marc Laurent, Helix vice president of partnerships and operations, said the current situation has them in regular contact with the various producers behind their equipment and materials to plan far ahead of any supply changes.

We've been working directly with the manufacturer to listen to what options they have at that time for a given week to understand, OK, so the normal supply is constrained. You have another two that's close enough that we could adjust to and work with, Laurent said. These are the conversations we have weeks ahead so were not surprised.

Swabs that collect samples and the liquid in the tube that keeps the specimen viable can also be difficult to obtain, but the greater constraint is among materials needed for the actual processing.

Laurent said because the testing technology is often proprietary, certain components are not interchangeable, such as the reagents, or chemicals that help identify if coronavirus is present, and plastic tips called pipettes. About a dozen are required for every specimen because they help mix in the multiple reagents but are tossed in the trash after adding each one.

Companies may also be limited to certain materials based on their test application submitted to federal regulators.

This means labs cant always look to a different source when their suppliers are out.

The countys public health lab faced a similar dilemma earlier this month when officials nearly cancelled appointments at its testing sites because a supplier, Hologic, had to short the countys weekly shipment of collection supplies known as testing kits. Unlike Helix, Hologics testing process requires only one machine that is operated at the countys lab but requires the companys collection materials.

We were facing a real tough situation of needing to close down some of our county testing sites, county Health and Human Services Director Nick Macchione said during a July 13 news conference.

Hologic, which said it provides millions of COVID tests each month nationwide, told KPBS that manufacturing output varies by week and the reduction to the county was temporary. Michael Watts, the companys vice president of investor relations and corporate communications, said shipments of testing kits have since rebounded and the company plans to provide the countys health lab with 20,000 tests a month.

But at the time, Macchione said Helix provided a last-minute reprieve.

Our ability to test will stabilize because of this new partnership, but were always looking to bolster our resources, in fact thats how we found Helix, he said.

Helix CEO Marc Stapley said the company developed its test to require a type of swab thats more abundant, at least for now and it selected a transport media that can stay at room temperature instead of needing to be chilled.

You need the refrigeration either in the packaging or the transportation itself in order to keep everything at a stable ... temperature and so weve obviated that issue in the supply chain by picking the transport media we did, Stapely said.

Still, the company will have to further navigate the challenges as it plans to significantly expand its daily testing capacity to 10,000 by the fall. That later may even grow to 25,000 as Helix plans to use next-generation sequencing technology that can manage tens of thousands of tests a day.

Thatll require the use of their high-throughput machines called next-generation sequencers, which Helix staff have already nicknamed Vesuvius and Fuji. Bootes will still play his role in the process.

KPBS' daily news podcast covering local politics, education, health, environment, the border and more. New episodes are ready weekday mornings so you can listen on your morning commute.

Tarryn Mento Health Reporter

The health beat is about more than just illness, medicine and hospitals. I examine what impacts the wellness of humans and their communities.

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For Biotech Firms, Keeping Up With COVID-19 Testing Demand Is A Daily Struggle - KPBS

Centene’s Medicaid enrollment is growing slower than expected amid COVID-19 – Modern Healthcare

Health insurer Centene Corp. said Tuesday that its Medicaid enrollment isn't growing quite as fast as expected amid the COVID-19 crisis.

Researchers widely anticipated that enrollment in the public insurance program for low-income people would swell during the pandemic as employers laid off workers, who they expected would look to Medicaid as a replacement for job-based health coverage.

The Urban Institute estimated that nearly 12 million people could gain Medicaid coverage because of the pandemic if the unemployment rate hits 20%. The Kaiser Family Foundation projected 12.7 million people who likely lost their job-based coverage as of May 2020 and became uninsured would be eligible for Medicaid.

But so far, Medicaid enrollment growth has been muted. The latest national data from CMS shows that Medicaid and Children's Health Insurance Program enrollment was 72.3 million in April, an increase of just 1.7% since January and 2% since March. Centene is seeing similarly slow growth within its own plans.

"Membership is coming in at lower rates than initially anticipated and below what was expected based on unemployment trends," Centene CEO Michael Neidorff said during the company's second quarter earnings call.

Company officials said the slower-than-expected enrollment growth could stem from more employers choosing to furlough rather than lay off workers during the COVID-19 crisis. They also said enhanced unemployment benefits could be contributing to the lower enrollment.

To be sure, Centene still recorded higher Medicaid membership in the quarter, even if lower than the company expected. It covered nearly 12.6 million members at the end of June, an increase of about 6%, or 736,300 members, over the end of March, when the pandemic first began disrupting the U.S. economy. Membership in the public health insurance exchanges, which was also expected to accelerate during the pandemic, grew just 2% to 2.2 million over the same time period.

Jeffrey Schwaneke, Centene's chief financial officer, noted that Medicaid membership growth did not result from newly unemployed people signing up, but from states suspending eligibility redeterminations. He also said enrollment gains varied widely by state: "We saw good growth in Florida, but hardly any growth in California."

Centene now expects membership growth to peak during the fourth quarter at 1.4 million new members across its business lines, including Medicaid. Just a month ago, Centene said it expected to see membership growth hit 1.9 million in August.

As a result, Centene decided to lower its revenue expectations for this year by $500 million. It now expects to add $3.5 billion in revenue from COVID-related membership growth in 2020. Earlier this year, the company told investors it would bring in $4 billion in revenue from pandemic-driven membership gains. The company left its earnings guidance unchanged.

Overall, Centene's top and bottom lines were driven higher in the second quarter by its $17 billion acquisition of insurer WellCare Health Plans, which closed in January, as well as membership growth. Like other insurers, Centene also benefited from members' using fewer healthcare services during the pandemic as providers postponed elective procedures and routine appointments to conserve resources for COVID-19 patients.

Neidorff said that by the end of the second quarter, patients' use of healthcare services was back to normal, though it is has begun to slip again in July. He also said the company is now experiencing an increase in COVID-related costs.

Centene recorded net income of $1.2 billion in the three months ended June 30, up from $492 million at the same time in 2019. Its revenue grew 51% to $27.7 billion, while operating costs increased 45.1% to $25.7 billion. Membership totaled 24.6 million people, an increase of 64.1% from one year ago.

Centene's medical loss ratio, which illustrates the amount of premiums spent on medical care and quality improvement, fell to 82.1% in the second quarter from 86.7% a year ago.

Excerpt from:

Centene's Medicaid enrollment is growing slower than expected amid COVID-19 - Modern Healthcare

COVID-19 outbreak reported at Hancock County blueberry processor – Bangor Daily News

The BDN is making the most crucial coverage of the coronavirus pandemic and its economic impact in Maine free for all readers. Click here for all coronavirus stories. You can join others committed to safeguarding this vital public service by purchasing a subscription or donating directly to the newsroom.

A Hancock County company that processes and packages blueberries has detected five cases of the coronavirus among migrant workers it had hired to rake blueberries.

Hancock Foods tested the employees as a precautionary measure before they began work and interacted with other employees, said Kim Allen, an official with the company, which is located in the Washington Junction neighborhood of the town of Hancock, just east of the Ellsworth city line.

Additional testing is now underway and support services are being offered to employees of the company, said Nirav Shah, director of the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

Hancock Foods is owned by Allens Blueberry Freezer, based in Ellsworth.

We were bringing in a crew of migrant workers for the blueberry harvest, Allen said.

The workers are being quarantined under the supervision of the Maine Mobile Health Program, a nonprofit health care agency that serves seasonal farm workers.

Until those who tested positive get a clean bill of health, the company will have to find other workers, Allen said. Hancock Foods does not plan to bring in any more migrant workers, but intends to fill remaining raker positions with local residents, she said.

Hancock County has seen a low number of coronavirus cases since the start of the pandemic. The county has the third lowest rate of coronavirus infections in the state, according to Maine CDC data. As of late Monday, the county had seen 18 cases total among residents, one death and two hospitalizations.

Coronavirus infections among migrant workers, however, have been common throughout the pandemic as they have gradually moved north to tend to different crops.

The outbreak at Hancock Foods was one of three new coronavirus outbreaks the Maine CDC reported Tuesday.

One of those outbreaks was at Central Maine Medical Center in Lewiston, where 12 cases 10 among staff and two among patients were reported. The Maine CDC is still investigating that outbreak, but it appears that a patient introduced the coronavirus to the facility before it spread, Shah said.

The other outbreak, of three cases, was reported at Sappis paper mill in Westbrook.

The state has seen more outbreaks of the coronavirus at workplaces in recent weeks as Maines economy has gradually reopened. Earlier in the pandemic, outbreaks at nursing homes and group homes where people with intellectual disabilities live were more common.

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COVID-19 outbreak reported at Hancock County blueberry processor - Bangor Daily News

COVID-19 in Illinois updates: Heres whats happening Tuesday – Chicago Tribune

Also on Tuesday, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot added Wisconsin, Missouri, North Dakota and Nebraska to the citys self-quarantine list. People entering the city from those states are asked to self-isolate for 14 days. There are now 22 states on the self-quarantine list.

Heres whats happening Tuesday regarding COVID-19 in the Chicago area and Illinois:

6:04 p.m.: US officials say Russian intelligence services are spreading disinformation about the coronavirus

Russian intelligence services are using a trio of English-language websites to spread disinformation about the coronavirus pandemic, seeking to exploit a crisis that America is struggling to contain ahead of the presidential election in November, U.S. officials said Tuesday.

Two Russians who have held senior roles in Moscows military intelligence service known as the GRU have been identified as responsible for a disinformation effort reaching American and Western audiences, U.S. government officials said. They spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

The information had previously been classified, but officials said it had been downgraded so they could more freely discuss it. Officials said they were doing so now to sound the alarm about the particular websites and to expose what they say is a clear link between the sites and Russian intelligence.

5:47 p.m.: With no perfect solution in sight, schools in Arlington Heights and Plainfield are latest to reject in-person classes this fall in favor of remote learning only

As the COVID-19 pandemic shows no signs of ceasing, school district officials in Arlington Heights and Plainfield said this week that their schools will be offering strictly remote learning in the fall.

While officials at Arlington Heights School District 25 had unveiled a preliminary plan earlier this summer that would have given families the choice between in-person or online learning, in a Monday letter to parents Superintendent Lori Bein said officials had reversed course.

There is no perfect solution for how to provide in-person instruction while also providing a 100% guarantee of safety for all students and staff, Bein said. The only thing that I know for certain is that plans will need to be flexible as there could be many changes throughout the school year.

5:07 p.m.: How to stay calm, optimistic, even happy during the COVID-19 pandemic Tribune readers share what works for them

Last week, we asked you to share the one thing that has provided joy in your life amidst the confusion and uncertainty of the coronavirus. You responded with simple yet meaningful items and activities that spark creativity, love and the desire to help other people.

4:25 p.m.: Gary will close Marquette Park Beach starting Wednesday, Mayor Jerome Prince said.

Concerned about COVID-19s spread, Prince said the beach will be closed for at least two weeks. The parks shelters and parking lots will also be closed, he said.

Gary cops will be patrolling the beach and kicking off anyone there, Prince said. Marquette Park will still be open for recreation as long as people are keeping apart, he said.

We continue to see almost daily double-digit increases in our new COVID-19 positive cases in Gary, Prince said. We also must ease the logistical strains on our public safety teams and our beach neighborhoods.

Gary has seen 63 virus deaths and 1,047 positive cases, spokesman Mike Gonzalez said.

4:14 p.m.: Berghoff closes temporarily, a month after reopening, blaming pandemic economic challenges

The Berghoff Restaurant, a historic German restaurant downtown, and Adams Street Brewery, its adjoining brewery, have temporarily closed, starting Tuesday, July 28. The Berghoff Cafe at OHare will remain open.

This decision was strictly a business one, according to a recording on the Berghoffs main telephone line. No employee has tested positive for COVID-19 nor have the restaurants been cited for violating any COVID-19 policies or procedures.

Colleen Silk, brand manager, blamed the lack of customers downtown. In an email, she said that tourism in the Loop is down 68%, if not more, from last year and office buildings are still mostly closed. Since the restaurants re-opened June 30, they have seen an average of 15 to 20 customers a day, which is more than a 90% decrease since last year.

So we may hopefully reopen in the near future, and to save what capital is left, the family decided it is best to close our doors for the time being, she wrote. It was not a decision they made lightly and (they) contemplated over this extensively beforehand.

3:57 p.m.: Plan to slash $600 unemployment boost could mean big delays in jobless benefits, states warn

A Republican proposal to slash the $600 weekly benefit boost for those left jobless because of the coronavirus shutdown could result in weeks or even months of delayed payments in some states.

Older computer systems that took weeks to set up for the initial federal unemployment enhancement would need to be reprogrammed again twice under the GOP plan.

In Florida, state Rep. Anna Eskamani, a Democrat from Orlando, said the state has not even gotten the original supplemental benefit to everyone entitled to it.

So the idea of changing the current process that has taken us months to put into place, that is still not even perfect, is a scary thought, she said. These changes, whatever they end up being, are going to create more bureaucratic layers for people to get the relief they need. Meanwhile, we have bills to pay, we have to put food on the table, we have medical expenses and a lot of people are suffering.

How to handle unemployment is a fiercely contested part of the debate as Congress negotiates the latest relief legislation.

Democrats want to bring back the federally funded $600-a-week unemployment bonus that is expiring, saying its a way to keep families and the economy afloat in a time when there are far more people out of work than jobs available.

Republicans argue the current amount is so high that it encourages people to remain on unemployment. They want to reduce it in two steps: First, by cutting the benefit by two-thirds to $200 a week through September. Then they want to switch that flat rate to a percentage in which the unemployed would receive benefits equal to no more than 70% of their previous incomes in November and December.

The debate isnt only about the economy and ideology. Its also about whats doable technologically, especially on software many states use that dates to the 1970s.

2:58 p.m.: Aldermen, advocacy groups call on City Council to pass ordinance to move medically vulnerable people out of shelters and jails

A coalition of groups voiced their support Tuesday for an ordinance sitting in the Chicago City Councils housing committee that would prioritize finding housing for medically vulnerable populations living in group living facilities such as shelters and jails during a pandemic like COVID-19.

The ordinance would amend existing housing regulations and is sponsored by Ald. Chris Taliaferro, 29th, and Ald. Walter Burnett Jr., 27th. It follows earlier reports about widespread COVID-19 cases in group settings such as homeless shelters, which health officials have called some of the most challenging outbreaks to stop.

Its unfathomable that we sit on unoccupied, ready-to-move-in homes while some are living on the street, and while some are even living in congregate shelters during a pandemic, Taliaferro said during a Tuesday news briefing.

1:50 p.m.: Democrats, Republicans are far apart as coronavirus aid talks intensify

Negotiations launched, the differences over the next coronavirus aid package are vast, a gulf between Democrats $3 trillion proposal and Republicans $1 trillion counteroffer, with millions of Americans jobless benefits, school reopenings and eviction protections at stake.

As top White House negotiators return to Capitol Hill on Tuesday the leverage is apparent: They are meeting at House Speaker Nancy Pelosis office. Republicans are so deeply divided over the prospect of big government spending its leaving Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell with a weakened hand.

It's unclear whether any agreement can be reached between Congress and President Donald Trump before Friday's deadline for expiring aid.

We cannot afford to fail, Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said as the chamber opened.

The outcome will be a defining one for the president and the parties heading into the November election as an uneasy nation is watching and waiting for Washington to bring some end to the health crisis and devastating economic fallout.

12:45 p.m.: Cubs Jon Lester voices his concerns about the Marlins COVID-19 outbreak: Its a little scary. You have to trust in this process and trust in the protocols.

While COVID-19 hovered around baseball in the wake of the Miami Marlins multiple positive tests, Chicago Cubs left hander Jon Lester maintained his focus Monday night in pitching five no-hit innings in his 2020 debut.

After the Cubs held on for an 8-7 win over the Reds, Lester acknowledged the efforts of his teammates to follow the new health and safety protocols could go for naught if more teams are hit as hard as the Marlins.

It raises questions, Lester said late Monday night. Were all concerned about safety and the protocols. We have to continue to trust in what were doing, and hopefully were doing the right thing.

Lester, 36, reluctantly used the world bubble in stressing how the Cubs traveling party must continue to contain themselves.

As long as we can continue to get negative tests, obviously its good for us, Lester said. On the other hand, you dont want to see anybody get sick or have to deal with this thing.

Its a little scary. You have to trust in this process and trust in the protocols that we have in place.

12:20 p.m.: Study finds 6 COVID-19 symptom clusters that may inform clinicians about the severity of cases

The study identifies six symptom clusters, or subtypes, of COVID-19:

Subtype 1, flu-like with no fever: headache, loss of smell, muscle pain, cough, sore throat and chest pain.

Subtype 2, flu-like with fever: fever and loss of appetite in addition to headache, loss of smell, cough, sore throat and hoarseness.

Subtype 3, gastrointestinal: diarrhea and loss of appetite, no cough, headache, loss of smell, sore throat and chest pain.

Subtype 4, severe level one, fatigue: fatigue in addition to headache, loss of smell, cough, fever, hoarseness and chest pain.

Subtype 5, severe level two, confusion: confusion in addition to headache, loss of smell, loss of appetite, cough, fever, hoarseness, sore throat, chest pain, fatigue and muscle pain.

Subtype 6, severe level three, abdominal and respiratory: shortness of breath, diarrhea and abdominal pain in addition to headache, loss of smell, loss of appetite, cough, fever, hoarseness, sore throat, chest pain, fatigue, confusion and muscle pain.

11:45 a.m.: After heavy COVID-19 toll on Illinois nursing homes, top regulators depart state agency

With thousands of COVID-19 deaths linked to Illinois nursing homes, two top regulators are now gone from a state agency criticized at times for its oversight of the facilities during the pandemic.

The Pritzker administration confirmed Tuesday that two top staffers at the Illinois Department of Public Health Debra Bryars and Aimee Isham departed last week.

Agency spokeswoman Melaney Arnold said Bryars left July 20 while Isham began a leave that same day. She did not elaborate on reasons for the departures, saying she was not able to discuss personnel information. The departures were first reported by WBEZ.

A Tribune investigation early in the pandemic found a high percentage of Illinois nursing homes had been cited for poor infection control practices, prompting advocates to warn that the state needed to aggressively monitor and fight the virus.

Gov. J.B. Pritzker and top leaders have repeatedly said their swift actions limited the virus spread and saved lives. Yet the agencys efforts have at times been broadly criticized as too timid and uncoordinated. Facilities complained they needed help getting more staff and protective gear as infections swept through hundreds of facilities.

11:30 a.m.: Bottled Blonde, controversial River North bar, closed permanently by coronavirus, but not violations

Bottled Blonde, the bar in the River North neighborhood of Chicago better known for its legal drama than pizza, closed permanently on Monday due to the coronavirus, but not COVID-19 violations.

Yesterday, Bottled Blonde surrendered their business licenses, permanently closing the River North bar after a series of serious nuisance conditions dating back to 2017, read a statement from the citys department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection. The establishment has a history of egregious license violations, including over-occupancy, noise violations, public urination, vomiting and other problematic conditions that have had a serious impact on neighbors and the surrounding community. The City is pleased that yesterdays action will end three years of legal proceedings with the permanent closure of this problem business.

The bar had not received any COVID-19 related citations, wrote the department spokesperson. The city had conducted an investigation earlier this month, but did not find any COVID-19 violations at that time.

Bottled Blonde, opened in November 2015, was accused of a racist dress code and allegations of operating in violation of its liquor license, as well as rowdy patrons. In 2017, its business license was revoked, but the revocation was stayed. That revocation was removed last October, leading to the closing of the business, which reopened the next day when that closing was undone.

10:30 a.m.: Bears nose tackle Eddie Goldman reportedly opts out of the 2020 season over COVID-19 concerns

Veteran Chicago Bears players are reporting to Halas Hall Tuesday for the first time to begin their COVID-19 intake testing to be cleared for training camp, but one fixture in the teams high-level defense wont be there.

Goldman, a second-round pick in 2015 who signed a $42 million, four-year contract extension two summers ago, has been an elite player in the middle of the defense. His absence would create a void in the middle of the line, creating more significant roles for Bilal Nichols and others.

The list of NFL players choosing to sit out the season over COVID-19 concerns is growing. ESPN reported that Patriots linebacker Donta Hightower is the fifth New England player to exercise that option.

Players have until Aug. 3 to opt out and one general manager said there are going to be more than we originally expected Tuesday morning. Players opting out in a high-risk category will receive a $350,000 stipend and an accrued season. Players not in the high-risk category will receive a $150,000 stipend but will not accrue a season. The contract of players in both categories will toll.

9:40 a.m.: Chicago-area house flippers surprisingly unaffected by COVID-19, but brace for mixed bag in months to come

Born from the burgeoning real estate market that preceded the Great Recession, flipping homes has become a national fascination over the past two decades. Thrifty bargain hunters scooped up foreclosed or decrepit properties, renovated them and quickly resold for a tidy profit.

The good news for those who have made a career out of the practice: It seems, at least for the time being, that house flipping has proven relatively pandemic-proof.

My business has been surprisingly unaffected, said Andy Goldman, whose family has been in the house-flipping business since the 1980s.

In the first three months of 2020, 7.5% of homes sold in the United States were flipped, according to a June report from real estate research firm ATTOM Data Solutions. Thats the highest rate since 2006 and a jump from 6.3% at the end of 2019.

Home flipping rates had dropped drastically in 2007 and began to gradually recover in 2010. The number of flipped homes sold in a quarter peaked around 100,000 in 2005, and while it was on the rise in recent years, a decline began in the second quarter of 2019. In the first quarter of 2020, 53,705 single-family homes and condos were flipped, according to the report.

Still, its too soon to fully grasp how the coronavirus pandemic will impact the house flipping market through 2020 and beyond, ATTOM chief product officer Todd Teta said in a statement.

Profits are down and are lower than theyve been since the dark days following the Great Recession, Teta said. Enter now the coronavirus pandemic, and the prospects for house flipping are notably uncertain, at least in the short term.

9:15 a.m.: Chicago adds Wisconsin, 3 other states to 14-day self-quarantine order, which now covers 22 states

Chicago added Wisconsin and three other states to Mayor Lori Lightfoots 14-day self-quarantine order on Tuesday.

There are now 22 states from which travelers are being told to self-quarantine upon arrival in Chicago due to coronavirus concerns. The requirement covering Wisconsin, Missouri, North Dakota and Nebraska goes into effect on Friday.

Lightfoots self-quarantine requirement was first implemented during the Fourth of July weekend but is not being actively enforced aside from signs and billboards telling people that they must self-quarantine.

The order figures to be particularly problematic with Wisconsin, given its proximity and the high number of people from Illinois who spend weekends and vacations there. Many Illinois and Chicago residents, including Gov. J.B. Pritzker, have homes there.

8:45 a.m.: MLB shortened season could be threatened, but games dont need to stop right now, says Dr. Anthony Fauci

The Miami Marlins coronavirus outbreak could endanger the Major League Baseball season, Dr. Anthony Fauci said Tuesday, although he doesnt believe games needs to stop now.

More than a dozen Marlins players and staff members tested positive for COVID-19, stranding the team in Philadelphia and raising anew questions about MLB's attempts to conduct a season.

"This could put it in danger," said Fauci, the nation's top infectious disease expert. "I don't believe they need to stop, but we just need to follow this and see what happens with other teams on a day-by-day basis."

Fauci made his comments on ABCs Good Morning America.

A week after appearing to project a more serious tone about the coronavirus, President Donald Trump is back to pushing unproven claims that an anti-malaria drug is an effective treatment and challenging the credibility of the nations leading infectious disease expert.

Overnight, after returning from a trip to North Carolina where he promoted efforts to develop a COVID-19 vaccine, Trump retweeted a series of tweets advocating for hydroxychloroquine.

YouTube, Facebook and Twitter have begun scrubbing the video from their platforms, saying it makes demonstrably false claims about the pandemic. The tweet the president amplified is, as of Tuesday morning, not visible on the platform but still atop his feed.

The video, published by Breitbart News, features a group of people wearing white lab coats calling themselves Americas Frontline Doctors, according to CNN. In front of the Supreme Court, they maintain the drug can cure the disease caused by coronavirus a claim which is contradicted by medical science. The speaker says masks are unnecessary and alleges a conspiracy by pharmaceutical companies.

The video went hugely viral on Facebook, with over 14 million views before it was removed Monday night for promoting misinformation, CNN reported.

Business did improve for McDonalds throughout the second quarter as restrictions lifted across the globe, but the fast food giant faces a bumpy and expensive recovery.

Of the chains 39,000 restaurants worldwide, 96% are now open, compared with 75% at the start of the second quarter. Comparable-store sales that were down 39% in April were down only 12% by June.

Last week, McDonalds said it will delay dining room reopenings for at least another month and will require face masks for anyone entering its restaurants.

McDonalds is also spending heavily to convince people to come back, particularly for breakfast. The Chicago company spent more than $200 million to support franchisee marketing during the second quarter. It also paid $31 million to distribution centers payments normally made by franchisees and $45 million to cover franchisees debts.

7:20 a.m.: CTA giving away Ventra cards, healthy travel kits during food distribution event at South Side grocery store

More here:

COVID-19 in Illinois updates: Heres whats happening Tuesday - Chicago Tribune

Comet NEOWISE and the International Space Station will be visible tonight – Cambridgeshire Live

Stargazers are in for a treat tonight with both the International Space Station and Comet NEOWISE visible in UK skies.

Last night, the comet was at its closest to Earth and in turn at its most visible.

But if you're yet to see the super bright comet, there is still hope because it will remain visible for the remainder of July.

It's one of the brightest comets to pass over the Earth in recent history, making it easy to spot without a telescope or binoculars.

It's extra good news for amateur astronomers as the International Space Station (ISS) will also be visible in the night sky on several occasions on Friday and Saturday.

So pack up the car, grab a blanket and head to one of Cambridgeshire's many stargazing spots to enjoy the wonder of the night sky.

Keep reading to find out how to spot the super bright Comet Neowise and the ISS.

Experts say to find the comet you need to look east.

The comet will appear underneath the Plough constellation, and just above the horizon.

Space.com advises that stargazers hold the bottom of their clenched fist on the horizon and the comet will appear above it.

Sometimes known as 'the Big Dipper' The Plough is part of a larger constellation called the Ursa major.

It's easy to spot in the sky because it looks somewhat like a big saucepan with a handle.

The comet was at its closest to the Earth on Thursday(July 23) but by Saturday (July 25) the comet will have moved so that it is directly underneath the Plough, as it moves further westwards and slightly higher on our horizon every night.

The International Space Station (ISS) will be visible from the UK tonight and tomorrow.

The ISS orbits the Earth about 16 times a day but it's not always visible at the most sociable times,reports the Mirror. It travels at a height of about 400km.

Tonight, it will be visible at 10.29pm and in the early hours of tomorrow at 12.06am.

There will be other chances to see it over the weekend, as detailed below.

If you're looking for a way to stay up to date with the latest breaking news from around Cambridgeshire, the CambridgeshireLive newsletter is a good place to start.

The daily update will deliver the topnewsandfeatures to your inbox every morning and evening.

We choose the most important stories of the day to include in the newsletter, including crime, court news, long reads, traffic and travel, food and drink articles and more.

Signing up to the newsletter is simple. Just put your email address in the box at the top of this story and click 'subscribe'.

It's one of the many ways that you can read the news that matters to you from CambridgeshireLive.

Friday, July 24, 10.29pm

Saturday, July 25, 12.06am

Saturday, July 25, 9.43pm

Saturday, July 25, 10.30pm

Saturday, July 25, 11.18pm

Monday, July 27, 12.08am

To the naked eye, theISS looks a big white dot that moves quickly across the sky without changing direction, unlike aircraft, for example.

It is usually the brightest object in the night sky after the Moon.

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Comet NEOWISE and the International Space Station will be visible tonight - Cambridgeshire Live

An Experimental COVID-19 Vaccine Begins its Phase 3 Trial Today

The experimental COVID-19 vaccine made by Moderna Inc begins its phase three clinical trials, the last round of testing before possible approval, on Monday.

An experimental COVID-19 vaccine developed by Moderna is beginning its final round of testing on Monday.

After passing the previous stages that are more focused on safety and identifying side effects, the new clinical trial will measure how effective the vaccine, dubbed mRNA-1273, actually is when it comes to preventing disease, NPR reports. Over the next few months, Moderna will determine whether the vaccine provides protection against the coronavirus.

A robust phase three clinical trial must be massive in order to produce robust, trustworthy data. Moderna is still actively recruiting volunteers, NPR reports, and hopes to get at least 30,000 participants to sign up. Half of them will get two injections of the vaccine spaced 28 days apart, while the other half will receive a saltwater placebo.

Participants will then be left to go about their daily lives, and the doctors running the trial will keep track of who catches the coronavirus and when. That means the study will take several months, NPR reports, especially because the virus may be spreading at different rates or be more prevalent in some participants’ communities than others.

But when all is said and done, Moderna’s vaccine will have to reach some strict goals, NPR reports. The vaccine will be considered effective as long as no more than about 150 participants — just one percent of everyone actually getting the vaccine — catch the coronavirus after their injection.

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Cybertruck Metal Can Be Etched, Heated Into a Rainbow

According to Musk's enthusiasm on Twitter, the exterior of Tesla's long-awaited Cybertruck could be heated and tempered to get a variety of colors.

Shop the Look

Last week, Tesla announced that the Elon Musk-run electric car company will be opening a US factory in Austin, Texas, to build the long-awaited Cybertruck.

Musk isn’t losing any time exploring some ways to make it look, well, just a little less like a giant stainless steel box on wheels.

In a series of tweet replies, very much in character for the CEO, Musk offered a hint of what the fortified, apocalypse-proof truck could end up looking like from the outside: pure white, or even a rainbow treatment, as Electrek reports.

Taste the Rainbow

Design student and Twitter user @flcnhvy suggested that “some types of steel change color when tempered,” and that a Cybertruck “could be torched using a not-a-flamethrower,” referring to The Boring Company’s controversial, propane-burning flamethrower. Being a man of a few words, Musk appeared to support the idea, replying with a cursory “yes.

Stainless steel does change color depending on what temperature it’s subjected to, ranging from grey, sand, brown, and purple, to blue and light blue. Heated just the right way, an otherwise monotone, stainless steel-clad Cybertruck could be turned into something far more cheerful looking.

Not Impossible

In response to a video of a piece of stainless steel being laser-etched with a fun pattern, Musk replied with “cool.” A render of an off-roader Cybertruck with a “white oxide” coating also got a reply out of Musk — such an option would be “not impossible.”

Whether Tesla will produce these color treatments in-house is debatable. A rainbow treatment will likely be an option relegated to the aftermarket, Electrek suggested.

READ MORE: Tesla Cybertruck’s steel body can be heated to get different colors [Electrek]

More on the Cybertruck: Elon Musk: “We Want to Be a Leader in Apocalypse Technology”

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Researchers Identify 21 Existing Drugs That Stop the Coronavirus

An international team of researchers have identified 21 existing drugs that stop the coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2 from replicating.

According to a new study published in the prestigious journal Nature, an international team of researchers have identified 21 existing drugs that stop the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, which causes COVID-19, from replicating. The new research could have bold implications for future of medical care during the pandemic.

The scientists were able to confirm that at certain concentrations, 21 drugs — out of a 100 tested — showed antiviral activity in lab tests. Interestingly, four of them were deemed effective in combination with remdesivir, a drug that the US has been stockpiling thanks to its potential in treating COVID-19.

“As infection rates continue to rise in America and around the world, the urgency remains to find affordable, effective, and readily available drugs that can complement the use of remdesivir, as well as drugs that could be given prophylactically or at the first sign of infection on an outpatient basis,” Sumit Chanda from the Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute and senior author of the study, said in a statement.

Thirteen of the 21 drugs are already undergoing clinical trials to show their effectiveness in treating COVID-19. Two have already been approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), but for treating allergies and leprosy, not COVID-19.

“This study significantly expands the possible therapeutic options for COVID-19 patients, especially since many of the molecules already have clinical safety data in humans,” Chanda said. “This report provides the scientific community with a larger arsenal of potential weapons that may help bring the ongoing global pandemic to heel.”

Testing is still underway of the drugs in animal models and “organoids,” which are miniaturized human organs made out of human tissue. If shown effective in those trials, the researchers are planning to ask the FDA to authorize clinical trials on human patients, according to the statement.

The 21 drugs were initially identified through a much broader Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation-backed project called ReFRAME, an effort to test 12,000 existing drugs for their potential effectiveness in treating COVID-19.

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Researchers Identify 21 Existing Drugs That Stop the Coronavirus

Professor Claims China Tried to Hide Early Info on COVID-19

Kwok Yung Yuen, a professor and microbiologist, told the BBC that Chinese officials may have tried to cover up the coronavirus in early January.

Kwok Yung Yuen, a professor and microbiologist at the University of Hong Kong, told the BBC on a special titled “Panorama: China’s Coronavirus Cover-Up” that Chinese officials may have purposefully tried to hide the source of the outbreak of the coronavirus back in early January.

“I do suspect that they have been doing some cover-up locally at Wuhan,” he said, as quoted by VICE, referring to the city widely believed to be the epicenter of the pandemic. “The local officials who are supposed to immediately relay the information has not allowed this to be done as readily as it should.”

At the core of Yuen’s complaint is that he says he identified COVID-19 cases in Shenzhen, about 700 miles from Wuhan, in early January, meaning that the virus was spreading between people.

But he says that after he told Chinese authorities about his finding, it took them eight days to warn the public that the coronavirus was spreading in the population.

Yuen invoked the 2003 outbreak of the SARS virus to stress the importance of an early response, which he believes China squandered.

“There is one thing that I learned [during the SARS outbreak] […] if you don’t make use of every hour, you are in big, big trouble,” he told the program, as quoted by The Independent.

“If the same interventions that were put in place on 23 January had been put in place on 2 January, we may have seen a 95 per cent reduction in the number of cases,” Yuen told Panorama.

Yuen also alleges that Chinese officials destroyed early evidence pertaining to the virus.

The news comes after Chinese doctor Lin Wenliang reportedly tried to warn the world about the coronavirus in December. He was subsequently silenced by Chinese authorities and passed away in early February.

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Here’s Why NASA’s Next Rover is Bringing a Mars Rock Back to Mars

Perseverance will be bringing a rock back to Mars that scientists believe to have originated on Mars roughly 600,000 to 700,000 years ago.

Homeward Bound

In a matter of days, NASA is set to launch its Perseverance rover to Mars.

One curiosity of the mission is that Perseverance will be bringing a rock back to the Red Planet that scientists believe originated on Mars roughly 600,000 to 700,000 years ago, as the BBC reports — for a fascinating scientific reason.

Meteorite Madness

The rock, first discovered in the deserts of Oman in 1999, is one of nine materials that NASA’s rover will take with it. These materials, housed inside a device on the rover called Sherloc, will serve to calibrate Perseverance’s laser and spectroscopy instruments. In other words, it’ll be a control to make sure that if Perseverance finds evidence of ancient life, it’ll know for sure.

“We’ll look at the calibration target in the first 60-90 days and perhaps not again for six months because we think the instrument is really very stable,” Luther Beegle, principal investigator of Sherloc at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, told the BBC.

Martian Souvenir

“But if we start seeing interesting things on the surface of Mars that we can’t explain in the spectra, then we’ll look back to the calibration target to make sure that the instrument’s working correctly,” he added.

The eventual goal is to collect interesting rocks, seal them in a small tube, and leave them behind on the Martian surface to be returned by later missions.

READ MORE: Nasa Mars rover: Meteorite to head home to Red Planet [BBC]

More on Perseverance: NASA’s Next Rover Will Bring First-Ever Microphone to Mars

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Scientists Studying Sex Differences in the Brain Fear Their Work Will Be Misrepresented

A team of scientists studying how sex chromosomes are linked to differences in the brain has to tread lightly, lest their work be misrepresented.

A team of National Institutes of Health (NIH) scientists is walking a delicate line: publishing research about how the human brain differs across sex, while trying to guard against their work being misrepresented by misogynists.

Armin Raznahan, chief of developmental neurogenomics at the NIH, published research in the journal PNAS on Monday about how sex chromosomes are tied linked to differences in the size of various brain regions. The research, Wired reports, could give doctors a better understanding of how neurodevelopmental disorders may manifest in different groups.

“If we can understand the biology of sex better,” Raznahan told Wired, “maybe those pathways are going to help us understand what is happening to put a person at risk of manifesting symptoms of autism spectrum disorder, for example.”

But the sensitive nature of Raznahan’s research has him trying to fight misinterpretations of it — something he told Wired he’s run into since early in his career.

“I got my fingers burned when I first started,” Raznahan told Wired.

At the time, he was researching the differences between how men’s and women’s brains change over time. And while his paper only touched on structural changes and not any functional differences, that didn’t stop The Wall Street Journal from citing his work in a 2011 article that suggested schoolchildren might learn better in single-sex classrooms.

Because it’s such a dodgy topic — and the practical conclusions one could draw from such research remain unclear, scientists told Wired that maybe scientists shouldn’t investigate sex differences in the brain so thoroughly at all. But others argue that it’s essential.

“We can’t not make discoveries,” University of Maryland School of Medicine pharmacology professor Margaret McCarthy told Wired, “because they might be misused.”

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