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Monthly Archives: July 2017
Psoriasis – Symptoms and causes – Mayo Clinic
Posted: July 21, 2017 at 11:46 am
Symptoms
Psoriasis signs and symptoms are different for everyone. Common signs and symptoms include:
Psoriasis patches can range from a few spots of dandruff-like scaling to major eruptions that cover large areas.
Most types of psoriasis go through cycles, flaring for a few weeks or months, then subsiding for a time or even going into complete remission.
There are several types of psoriasis. These include:
Guttate psoriasis. This type primarily affects young adults and children. It's usually triggered by a bacterial infection such as strep throat. It's marked by small, water-drop-shaped, scaling lesions on your trunk, arms, legs and scalp.
The lesions are covered by a fine scale and aren't as thick as typical plaques are. You may have a single outbreak that goes away on its own, or you may have repeated episodes.
Pustular psoriasis. This uncommon form of psoriasis can occur in widespread patches (generalized pustular psoriasis) or in smaller areas on your hands, feet or fingertips.
It generally develops quickly, with pus-filled blisters appearing just hours after your skin becomes red and tender. The blisters may come and go frequently. Generalized pustular psoriasis can also cause fever, chills, severe itching and diarrhea.
If you suspect that you may have psoriasis, see your doctor for an examination. Also, talk to your doctor if your psoriasis:
Seek medical advice if your signs and symptoms worsen or don't improve with treatment. You may need a different medication or a combination of treatments to manage the psoriasis.
The cause of psoriasis isn't fully understood, but it's thought to be related to an immune system problem with T cells and other white blood cells, called neutrophils, in your body.
T cells normally travel through the body to defend against foreign substances, such as viruses or bacteria.
But if you have psoriasis, the T cells attack healthy skin cells by mistake, as if to heal a wound or to fight an infection.
Overactive T cells also trigger increased production of healthy skin cells, more T cells and other white blood cells, especially neutrophils. These travel into the skin causing redness and sometimes pus in pustular lesions. Dilated blood vessels in psoriasis-affected areas create warmth and redness in the skin lesions.
The process becomes an ongoing cycle in which new skin cells move to the outermost layer of skin too quickly in days rather than weeks. Skin cells build up in thick, scaly patches on the skin's surface, continuing until treatment stops the cycle.
Just what causes T cells to malfunction in people with psoriasis isn't entirely clear. Researchers believe both genetics and environmental factors play a role.
Psoriasis typically starts or worsens because of a trigger that you may be able to identify and avoid. Factors that may trigger psoriasis include:
Anyone can develop psoriasis, but these factors can increase your risk of developing the disease:
If you have psoriasis, you're at greater risk of developing certain diseases. These include:
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Psoriasis - Symptoms and causes - Mayo Clinic
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New Gene Discoveries Could Redefine Alzheimer’s Treatment – Drug Discovery & Development
Posted: at 11:45 am
Developing a potent therapy for Alzheimers disease will be one of the biggest healthcare challenges over the next few decades.
Multiple pharmaceutical companies have taken a crack at creating a drug for this debilitating condition but a variety of factors revolving around the complexity of the disease and competing theories about how it forms has hindered the clinical development process.
However, a series of a new discoveries focusing on genes and proteins could potentially lay the groundwork for better diagnosis for early warnings signs as well as a new avenue for novel targeted treatments.
New Strategies for Enlisting the Immune System
An international research collaboration discovered three new gene variants that appear to indicate the brains immune cells in the onset of the disorder.=
The scientists found these variants after analyzing the DNA from 85,000 patients who have samples in the International Genomics of Alzheimers Project, according to the announcement from the University of Pennsylvania.
The three rare variants are PLCG2, ABI3, and TREM2. All three of them are protein-coding mutations highly expressed in microglia. The trio is also a part of an immune cell protein network where numerous components contribute to risk of Alzheimers disease.
Its been known for decades that microglia a first-line-of-defense cell we are born with surround amyloid plaque deposits associated with Alzheimers. These multiple gene hits all originating from microglia are the clearest demonstration that these cells are part of Alzheimers pathology and, more importantly, provide clear protein targets where we can start to intervene with drugs, said Gerard D. Schellenberg, Ph.D., a professor of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, and director of the Alzheimer Disease Genetics Consortium (ADGC) at UPenns School of Medicine.
PLCG2 is an enzyme that is a potential drug target, but more work needs to be done in order to assess the right process for targeting microglia and whether that injury response should be inhibited or activated and at what stage of the disease.
Since prevention is a key goal of therapy, influencing microglial cells before onset of cognitive changes needs to be explored, continued Schellenberg.
Better Risk Assessment
Scientists from Cardiff University uncovered two genes that may play a role in influencing an individuals risk of developing the neurodegenerative disease.
Both of these genes, previously not considered candidates for Alzheimers, were identified during an analysis comparing the DNA of tens of thousands of individuals with Alzheimers against other age-matched people who had no signs of the disease.
"In addition to identifying two genes that affect the risk of developing Alzheimer's disease, our new research reveals a number of other genes and proteins that form a network likely to be important in its development. These particular genes, which suggest that immune cells in the brain play a causal role in the disease, are also very good targets for potential drug treatment," said Dr Rebecca Sims from Cardiff University's School of Medicine, in a statement.
The teams previous research identified 24 susceptibility genes, which could ultimately contribute to a better understanding of the mechanisms underlying the disease.
"The discovery of two new risk genes for Alzheimer's is an exciting advance that could help to deepen our understanding of what happens in the brains of people with the disease. These genes reinforce a critical role for special cells in the brain - called microglia - that are responsible for clearing up debris including damaged cells and proteins, said Dr. Doug Brown, the director of research and development at the Alzheimers Society.Insights like this are vital to help unravel the complexities of Alzheimer's disease and show researchers where to focus their efforts in the search for new, effective treatments.
Protein Capture
A team of scientists from the University of Bradford and University of Dundee implemented a new methodology for ensnaring proteins associated with the onset of neurodegenerative conditions like Alzheimers disease.
The technique traps proteins containing a specific modification that can provide potential markers for certain conditions. These alterations are based on sugar and when attached to a protein affects how it functions.
Essentially, the scientists grow a protein with an engineered tail that specifically grabs sugar-modified proteins. This tail then becomes a handle to pull out all the proteins with this sugar modification and then separates those proteins from their non-modified counterparts.
This methodology represents a major step forward. We are now in a position where we can easily trap the proteins we need to target. If we can do this we can then identify the proteins which we think may be involved in the disease process, said lead researcher Dr. Ritchie Williamson of the University of Bradford, in a statement.We also have the potential to find biomarkers, especially in younger people, and to probe different diseases.
An experiment like this can be easily replicated because it doesnt required highly specialized laboratory equipment and wide-ranging validation of these proteins.
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New Gene Discoveries Could Redefine Alzheimer's Treatment - Drug Discovery & Development
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Study sheds light on the ‘other’ breast cancer genes – CNN International
Posted: at 11:45 am
"Because of my family history, I expected to be diagnosed at some point," said the New York-based real estate attorney. She's now 34 and said she's cancer-free.
In 2013, an MRI screening at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York revealed signs of cancer in Golkin-Nigliazzo's right breast. She then had a spot mammogram and biopsy performed.
The next day, Golkin-Nigliazzo received a phone call from her doctor.
"She said, 'We found some malignant cells.' That's what she started off with, and everybody knows that's breast cancer," Golkin-Nigliazzo said.
Because of her family history, Golkin-Nigliazzo was tested after her diagnosis for mutations on the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes, which increase the risk of breast and ovarian cancers in women.
The tests came back negative.
"I was more surprised to hear my genetic results rather than my own diagnosis, because I assumed I inherited some kind of genetic mutation that would make me susceptible to developing breast cancer," Golkin-Nigliazzo said. Additionally, behavioral and environmental risk factors had been determined to be unlikely.
"So right now, I am one big genetic question mark," she said. "We don't know all of the genes that have an effect on cancers, but I know that with the amazing research that is being done by geneticists, when my daughter is old enough to take advantage of genetic testing, there will be more genes to test, and we will be able to learn more about our genetic risk."
Golkin-Nigliazzo, the mother of an 18-month-old daughter, said she has enrolled as a participant in a number of studies at Memorial Sloan Kettering's research lab on unknown genetic mutations that may increase breast cancer risk.
One reason why the new mom has decided to participate in research is because of her daughter, she said.
"When I found out I was having a little girl, I knew I would be passing on my familial risk of breast cancer. Being able to participate in these studies is my own way of helping researchers identify the genes that affect breast cancer risk in many women, including my daughter," Golkin-Nigliazzo said.
"I hope that genetics (research) takes us to the next level so that she knows all of her risks and is able to really conquer cancer head-on if that's something in her future," she said. "There's something in my blood that's genetically predisposing myself and my family to the disease, and one day, I'm hopeful that science will uncover that."
But what's the likelihood of carrying such mutations?
Researchers are getting a step closer to answering that question, especially in Jewish women like Golkin-Nigliazzo.
A new study of 1,007 women of Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry who had been diagnosed with breast cancer found that a whopping 903 had none of the widely known mutations in the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes.
Rather, among those 903 women, 31, or 3.4%, carried a damaging mutation in lesser-known genes that are related to breast cancer. And seven, or 0.8%, carried a different mutation on BRCA1 or BRCA2 than what's widely known.
"I am an Ashkenazi Jew, and I personally found this article to be particularly fascinating," Golkin-Nigliazzo said.
The DNA samples were sequenced, and the researchers targeted 23 established and candidate breast cancer genes, including BRCA1 and BRCA2.
The researchers found that overall, 142, or 14.1%, of the women carried a germline mutation responsible for their breast cancer, which broke down to 11% in the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes and 3.1% in CHEK2 or another breast cancer gene.
However, the study had some limitations, including that only those genes known or suspected to harbor breast cancer-related mutations were sequenced and considered for the study.
Also, more research is needed to determine whether or how the findings could be applied to non-Jewish populations.
"This paper is part of an ongoing quest to identify women at high risk for breast cancer," said Dr. Matthew Ellis, professor and director of the Lester and Sue Smith Breast Center at Baylor College of Medicine, who was not involved in the new study.
"We are inexorably moving towards a world where there will be widespread, even universal, genetic screening to risk-stratify patients for early diagnostic techniques, such as mammography and MRI and for surgical intervention," he said. "This paper is a further step in that direction by looking beyond BRCA1 and 2, as there are dozens of other genes that, when abnormal, also increase breast cancer risk."
The researchers wrote in the study that Ashkenazi Jewish patients with breast cancer can benefit from testing for all breast cancer genes.
"Approximately half of the patients with a damaging mutation in any breast cancer gene did not have a family history suggesting inherited predisposition," the authors wrote. "Therefore, to limit genetic testing to patients with a suggestive family history is to miss about 50% of patients with actionable mutations."
"The most recent national screening guidelines recommend genetic testing for all Ashkenazi Jewish patients with breast cancer," the authors wrote. "This recommendation is fine, but testing women only after they develop cancer severely limits the power of precision medicine."
Though more inherited genetic mutations associated with breast cancer have been identified in recent years, the scientific understanding of those mutations and how they impact patients needs to be more fleshed out, Ellis said.
"The biology behind each one of these genes and the epidemiology is becoming increasingly well-understood," he said. "Although for now, I would say we're still struggling with this in clinic."
For instance, when one of the rarer genetic mutation diagnoses is made, there are still many questions about what type of guidance should be provided to a patient, he said.
"Should you take (the hormone-blocking drug) tamoxifen? Should you have your mastectomies? Or should you just have more frequent screening?" Ellis said. "Each one of these gene abnormalities is a separate diagnosis. It's a different gene, a different biology, and it might take a different approach. So there's an awful lot of work ahead of us."
Golkin-Nigliazzo hopes work in the field of breast cancer research might hold clues to the familial breast cancer that she and some of her relatives have been diagnosed with.
For treatment, Golkin-Nigliazzo decided to have a double mastectomy, a procedure in which both of her breasts were removed. Her father, Jeffrey Golkin, and now-husband, David Nigliazzo, stayed by her side during her appointments and surgery.
Since the cancer was detected early, Golkin-Nigliazzo said, "finding the breast cancer at 30 was empowering rather than scary, because I knew that I had done what I needed to do to make my chances of survival as high as possible."
"The fact is, researchers are just scratching the surface and making breakthroughs in genetics every day," Golkin-Nigliazzo said.
"To say that identifying a genetic mutation that increases breast cancer risk is like finding a needle in a haystack is an understatement. The human genome is incredibly complex," she said. "There are no known genetic mutations associated with my genetic background, but that doesn't mean that there aren't any out there."
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Study sheds light on the 'other' breast cancer genes - CNN International
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Here’s why "Despacito" has become the song of the summer – CBS News
Posted: at 11:45 am
Young Niana Guerrero drops everything to dance wherever she is to the world's No. 1 song, "Despacito." Her video has been viewed more than 69 million times.
This week, it became the most streamed song in history. Universal Music says the official version and a remix have been streamed 4.6 billion times since the original release six months ago.
CBS News correspondent Michelle Miller reports the song went to No. 1 in the U.S. this spring. It became just the third predominantly, or entirely, Spanish language song to reach the top of the Billboard Hot 100, following in the footsteps of Los Lobos' "La Bamba" and "Macarena."
Now, 10 weeks later, the song that means slowly isn't showing any signs of slowing down. The song of the summer comes down to just four syllables: des - pa - ci - to.
"Once you hear a song on every radio station, no matter the format, on everyone's playlist, in every nightclub, in every bar, that's how you know the song is the song of the summer," DJ Cipha Sounds said.
"It is dominant in all of the metrics that measure a chart hit from sales to streaming to airplay," chart analyst and music critic Chris Molanphy added.
The song of the summer has actually been warming up fans since February, when it reached the No. 1 spot on Billboard's Hot Latin songs chart. The king of reggaeton, Daddy Yankee, first made it big in the U.S. in 2004 with "Gasolina."
Luis Fonsi is a Latin balladeer with pop hits over the past two decades. Two Latin music veterans, both Puerto Rican, fused their hard and soft sounds to create a hybrid record.
Songwriter Erika Ender co-wrote the song with Fonsi.
"For some reason, there's songs that have special magic," Ender said. "And this one has it. It has spark, it has magic. It is contagious. And this is not only big for the ones involved, this is big for the Latin music industry, period."
Cipha Sounds says this crossover success is different from the Latin boom in the late 1990s with artists like Ricky Martin, Jennifer Lopez and Enrique Iglesias.
"They were kind of taking the American pop formula and adding Spanish language to it or like Spanglish," he said. "But 'Despacito' has taken reggaeton music, which is like real Puerto Rican street music, and bringing it to the masses."
If you listen closely, you'll hear that repetitive reggaeton drum beat and a so-called tropical style in some unlikely places.
"Sometimes, people change it," Cipha Sounds said. "They spice it up. They add different instruments on top of it, but the core is that one beat. It's like over and over and over. But it's so infectious that it just pops off, you know?"
It was already a familiar sound to Justin Bieber. Then, one fateful spring night, Bieber heard "Despacito" light up a club in Colombia.
"I am so happy he got involved," Ender said. "I was in the studio working on my new CD and then Fonsi calls me and he goes, 'Erika, I just received a phone call and apparently Justin Bieber wants to record this song, like right away, what do you think?' And I go, 'Are you kidding me? Go ahead. Yeah, of course.'"
The remix, with just a single additional verse in English, quickly went to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 in mid-May, where it's been ever since.
"Justin Bieber has provided magical hit record pixie dust," Molanphy said. "It is surprising that it's such a huge record on Anglo radio stations, despite the fact that it's nearly 80 percent in Spanish."
"I mean, this confirms that it doesn't matter the language," Ender added. "It doesn't matter the time. When you've got a good song in your hands, it flies as high as it wants."
Bieber did catch some heat when he was caught on video not knowing the Spanish words to the song, instead inserting some politically incorrect words. Most of the people CBS News talked to were willing to give him a pass since Bieber was the one who wanted to sing the song mostly in Spanish, which they applauded. However, Ender did say she'd love it if he could learn the lyrics.
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Here's why "Despacito" has become the song of the summer - CBS News
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John McCain Cancer Is ‘Godly Justice’ for Challenging Trump, Alt-Right Claims – Newsweek
Posted: at 11:45 am
Most Americans met Wednesday nights news that Arizona SenatorJohn McCain was facing a dire diagnosis of brain cancer with shows of respect for the elder statesman and former prisoner of war. But to some on the extreme right, the longtime Republican is a traitorworthy of scorn, presumably because ofhis willingness to work with Democrats, as well as his criticism of President Donald Trump.
The attack on McCain--a war hero who spent more than five years in a North Vietnamese prisonis faintly reminiscent of the early days of Trumps presidential campaign. During a family values summit in Iowa in the summer of 2015, just a month after hed announced his seemingly quixotic bid for the White House, Trump lashed out at McCain: Hes not a war hero. He was a war hero because he was captured. I like people who werent captured.
At the time, Trump was angry because McCain had complained that Trump "fired up the crazies" during an anti-immigration rally in Phoenix.
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Trump has in no way endorsed or encouraged the alt-rights attacks on McCain, which have thus far been limited to the fringes of digital discourse. Trump sent a statement of support for McCain on Wednesday. "Senator John McCain has always been a fighter. Melania and I send our thoughts and prayers to Senator McCain, Cindy, and their entire family. Get well soon," that statement said.
The attacks came regardless.
The last president for McCain will be Trump. Theres some godly justice right there, wrote one user on the Politically Incorrect message board of social media network 4chan, a hothouse of right-wing memes.
Im pretty sure that God is punishing him, wrote another 4chan user. God made it pretty clear that he supports New Right now.
"John McCain = a war mongering, never Trumper whom I dislike," wrote a user on Gab, another social media network popular with the alt-right.
The attacks, for the most part, focused on McCains willingness to work with Democrats during his three decades in the Senate. Those attacks, some of which are too tasteless to mention here, speak to the utter debasement of civic discourse, particularly on the internet.
On Twitter, some called McCain a cuck.
Cuck is short for cuckservative, a portmanteau that combines cuckold and conservative. As the Southern Poverty Law Center explained, the imprecation aims to depict conservatives who dont kowtow to ultra-right political views as inept traitors to the conservative base that elected them.
Any death of a genuine eternal cuck should be celebrated. John McCain's passing, assuming he passes, will do our race a lot of good and that's what matters, wrote a user on Reddit.
The vitriol against McCain seems especially striking given his record of military service, as well as his leadership of the Republican Party. The attackers, it would seem, have more fealty to alt-right mascot Pepe the Frog than to the GOPs iconic elephant.
Mike Cernovich, among the most vociferous members of the alt-right, implicitly defended such attacks on McCain with a tweet:
Hes a traitor and a psychopath, one responder said. His interests are of the globalists. They all need to die, faster the better. Then we straighten things out.
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John McCain Cancer Is 'Godly Justice' for Challenging Trump, Alt-Right Claims - Newsweek
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The Pub Spy reviews: Preston Brewery Tap, 197 Preston Road, Brighton – The Argus
Posted: at 11:45 am
The Preston Brewery Tap has got most things any good pub should have beer, atmosphere, three blokes on stools putting the world to rights, helpful, friendly staff and a ghost.
Not that I was immediately spooked when I walked in.
Coming in from bright sunshine, my first thought was who turned off all the lights?. It was just very dark at the bar.
However, the light was restored by a lovely, cheery welcome from the barmaid.
Listening to her dulcet tones I immediately realised she was from Down Under, but couldnt be sure whether she was Aussie or Kiwi. I decided not to mention it, Ive fallen foul of that one before.
I also played it safe with a pint of Harveys Sussex Best, clocking in at 4.0 per cent. It set me back 3.90, so I invested a further pound in a packet of crisps.
Settling in at the bar I couldnt help overhearing the conversation between the barmaid and a lovely customer dressed in a stripy dress and a tartan cropped top.
In fact, given the discussion about food I assume she must be Aussie to cut a long story short, crocodile, frogs, antelope all taste like chicken. Kangaroo, on the other hand, tastes like kangaroo.
All this talk of unusual food must have tickled my taste buds as I was, bizarrely, inspired to try a pint of the craft beer on tap, Picklejuice.
Its a bit stronger at 4.8 per cent and 60p more expensive than the Harveys. It was slightly more hoppy and zesty, but personally I wouldnt cross the street for it.
Things had quietened down and one fellow on the skew-whiff pool table had won all the money from his playing partner so even the click, click of the balls stopped.
Then, the conversation turned to the old radio kept under the bar.
Apparently the staff are convinced it is haunted and switches itself on without being touched sometimes even when its not connected to the power.
All I can say is, whichever ghost is responsible its not got great musical taste.
And talking of responsibility the barmaid had now moved on to blaming the ghost for ringing up a pint of Pride beer in the till for 3,000 spooky or human error, you decide.
All this talk of ghouls saw me head out to the garden to grab some fresh air.
Its less garden and more concrete back yard but theres a nice stable door which affords a good view of the neighbouring Shell garage.
There a few hanging baskets with nice-enough flowers and some colourful tables.
There are plenty more chairs piled up and, for some reason, a whole stack of corner flags.
They need to empty the ashtrays more often but the hardened nicotine fans seemed to like it well enough.
Back inside barmaid number one was finishing her shift and announcing she was off home to watch Harry Potter on the telly.
So, what else can I tell you? Theres a fruit machine, a jukebox, five screens showing sport, tapas are 4.50 each or three for 12 and when barmaid one hurt her foot on a heavy table she cooled it in the bar sink filled up with ice.
By now barmaid number two, with the most amazing blue hair, had taken over and was asking me if Id like another drink.
I really would have loved to stay but had to make a move so sadly bid her farewell until we meet again.
PRESTON BREWERY TAP, 197 PRESTON ROAD, BRIGHTON
Decor:
Trying to be trendy, thankfully doesnt achieve it
Drink:
The Harveys was fine, I should have stuck with it
Price:
Seems reasonable enough to me
Atmosphere: HHH Not at all bad for an early evening
Staff:
Barmaid 1 was friendly, barmaid 2 seemed livelier still
And finally, I must warn everyone next weeks edition of the column is not for the faint-hearted. I have never witnessed more politically incorrect behaviour in all my years doing this job and it is only right I report events as they happened.
However, if you are easily offended or thought this city had moved on from the 1970s, then you might be best advised to give next weeks report a miss.
I promise I wont be put out and will welcome you back the following week. If you do decide to read it then please dont shoot the messenger.
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The Pub Spy reviews: Preston Brewery Tap, 197 Preston Road, Brighton - The Argus
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China’s Top Cyber Watchdog Is Making More Demands on Tech Firms – Fortune
Posted: at 11:43 am
China's top cyber authority ordered the country's top tech firms to carry out "immediate cleaning and rectification" of their platforms to remove content deemed offensive to the Communist Party and the country's national image, it said on Wednesday.
The watchdog held a meeting with representatives from firms including Tencent Holdings ( tcehy ) , Baidu ( bidu ) and Sohu.com , on Tuesday where it gave them a list of specific errors, the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) said in a statement on social media.
The violations include distorting Chinese history, spreading fake news, misinterpreting policy directives and failing to block content that subverts public stability.
"[The sites] must adhere to the correct political line and moral norms," the statement said.
Chinese authorities have recently cracked down on platforms that allow users to share media from outlets that are not sanctioned under state-issued licenses, amid a wider censorship campaign spearheaded by President Xi Jinping.
On June 1 the CAC ushered in new regulations requiring all offline and online media outlets to be managed by Party-approved editorial staff. Workers in the approved outlets must receive training from local propaganda bureaus.
Related: Chinas WeChat Is a Censorship Juggernaut
In the wake of the new regulations several sites have been targeted with fines and closures under the watchdog's orders.
In specific examples, the CAC criticized one platform that failed to censor articles that "seriously deviated from socialist values" by saying China benefited from U.S. assistance during conflicts with Japan during World War II.
Other examples included a story detailing alleged affairs by party officials, an opinion piece that decried China's death penalty and an article that urged readers to invest in speculative real estate projects.
The CAC said the firms were required to immediately close offending accounts and strengthen "imperfect" auditing systems to avoid future punishment.
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China's Top Cyber Watchdog Is Making More Demands on Tech Firms - Fortune
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WhatsApp is being targeted by China’s censors, experts say – CNNMoney
Posted: at 11:43 am
Unlike most Western media platforms, including its parent company Facebook (FB, Tech30), the popular encrypted messaging app had managed to escape the attention of Chinese officials. Now it's firmly on their radar.
Multiple WhatsApp users contacted by CNNMoney reported they were unable to send images or videos on Tuesday. Cyber experts said they had seen further disruption on WhatsApp servers in China on Wednesday.
The servers were not completely blocked but are "largely unavailable," said Charlie Smith of GreatFire.org, a group that monitors internet censorship in the country.
"I have also conducted speed tests from China and these sites are not reachable," he told CNNMoney.
Nadim Kobeissi, an applied cryptographer at Paris-based startup Symbolic Software, said his team logged into the app via a Chinese server on Tuesday and were unable to send anything other than basic text messages.
"We realized that the servers that Whatsapp uses to exchange videos, photos and files were being blocked in the same way they would block Facebook, the BBC etc." Kobeissi said.
A WhatsApp spokesperson declined to comment when reached by CNNMoney. The Chinese government did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
China has tightened internet censorship across the board in the run-up to the Communist Party's 19th Congress this fall, where a major senior leadership reshuffle is expected. A new cybersecurity law that took effect in June is expected to make it harder for foreign firms to operate in China.
"The combination of the new cybersecurity law, and the upcoming Party congress, in addition to restrictions on unregistered VPNs, all point to this being a concerted government effort to crack down on freedom of expression," said Peter Micek, general counsel at digital rights organization Access Now and a teacher of internet policy and governance at Columbia University.
A wave of politically sensitive news appears to have prompted an increase in Chinese censorship in recent weeks.
Related: Even in death, the Chinese government still censors activist Liu Xiaobo
In the wake of the death of Liu Xiaobo -- a prominent Chinese Nobel Peace Prize laureate and human rights activist -- last week, censors blocked people from posting the image of an empty chair to pay tribute. The Nobel committee put Liu's medal on an empty chair in the 2010 award ceremony because he was still in prison.
CNN's broadcast was blacked out in China every time Liu's images or story appeared.
Smith, of GreatFire, believes the WhatsApp crackdown is primarily linked to the activist's death.
"Censors are working overtime, trying to eliminate all information about him. They must have determined that Chinese were using WhatsApp to share pictures and videos of him and decided to crackdown," he said.
Last week, images of Winnie the Pooh were also reportedly censored on Chinese social media because internet users were comparing the cartoon bear to President Xi Jinping.
Related: Chinese internet censors crack down on ... Winnie the Pooh
On Weibo (WB), China's equivalent of Twitter (TWTR, Tech30), no results appear on searches for "Winnie the Pooh and Xi Jinping."
Related: Google's man-versus-machine showdown blocked in China
China has 731 million internet users, and 95% of them access the web on mobile devices, according to data from the China Internet Network Information Center.
Western media and tech companies have been trying to crack the market for decades but have largely failed.
Facebook (FB, Tech30), Google (GOOGL, Tech30), Instagram, Twitter (TWTR, Tech30), Snapchat (SNAP) and YouTube are among the Western services blocked in China.
The crackdown has given domestic companies such as Baidu (BIDU, Tech30), Youku, Sina (SINA) and Tencent (TCEHY) a huge advantage.
Experts say WhatsApp's appearance in the government's crosshairs may also be aimed at helping a local competitor -- Tencent's WeChat. Unlike WhatsApp, WeChat is unencrypted and thus far easier to monitor.
"The point of these attacks is to coerce the Chinese audience into using more open systems such as WeChat," Kobeissi said.
This week's disruption suggests the risk of a full-fledged ban is rising.
"A complete block is just a natural progression," said Smith. "Then gradually people will shift to WeChat."
-- Steven Jiang contributed to this article.
CNNMoney (Hong Kong) First published July 20, 2017: 12:01 AM ET
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Net Censorship Undermines Opportunities of ‘Thailand 4.0’ – Khaosod English
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With the threat of a single gateway still looming over the heads of netizens, the recent dust-up over limiting access to Facebook content deemed inappropriate by the government, a future internet chock-full of stringent government controls still seems an inevitable reality.
While the government has asserted in the past that its motivation for any restrictions to the kingdoms internet access is cybersecurity, it would also seem that term covers blocking content it feels is not in its best interest which was recently the case when it requested the Thai Internet Service Provider Association, or TISPA, to engage Facebook in an attempt to get specific content blocked.
To be clear, its common practice for companies such as Facebook and Google to block content from specific countries such as Thailand if presented with a valid court order. From a social media platform perspective, its better to stay in business in a country by blocking some content than to be blocked altogether as has happened in China or North Korea.
What is not common practice though is for companies to take down content all together. That means, even when blocked, it remains accessible to people outside of the blocked country.
The issues related to a single gateway span far beyond the goal of preventing cybercrime or far more draconian attempts to limit access to information it can have a direct impact on the economy.
Given the economic policies being spearheaded under the Thailand 4.0 initiative and growth of tech startups in the past decade, shifting to a single gateway or regularly blocking social media content could undermine much of the intended progress.
With Thailand focused on moving toward a digital economy with the Thailand 4.0 initiative, its going to have to balance its concerns over digital content it deems illegal with the impact on platforms that many firms will leverage to do business.
Sure, finding ways to block content and take legal action against social media platforms might give the government more control over what it deems inappropriate or just doesnt want to see but also threatens to slow down content delivery to local users, making their experience less enjoyable. And if you are trying to grow a digital economy, creating an unpleasant online experience as the norm is not a positive feature.
User experience is a vital part of any digital business, and at a time when the digital economy is being pushed to the forefront of economic policies, it seems shortsighted to enact mechanisms that will ultimately hamper the proliferation of businesses that travel down this path.
If economic growth in all digital sectors is a target for Thailand, then policies such as content blocking and the single gateway will surely hinder not help that effort.
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[Podcasts] Test Pattern Episode 35: Censorship in Horror – The … – Bloody Disgusting
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Jacob and Tab examine the history of censorship in horror by focusing on the Motion Picture Production Code (aka the Hays Code), the demise of horror comics through the forming of the Comics Code Authority, and the moral panic of the video nasties era in Britain. Join them as they explore the battle between monster kids and three super villains hell bent on squashing horror at every turn Joseph Breen, Dr. Frederic Wertham, and Mary Whitehouse!
Subscribe and Listen to Past Episodes: iTunes | Google Play | Stitcher | Web Player
Test Pattern is made in the spirit of the old hosted monster movie shows of our youth a little bit spooky, a little bit silly, but always informative! Jacob and Tab have a new topic each week, with a focus on old school macabre films, favorite creature features, and B-movies.
You can interact with Tab and Jacob on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
Test Pattern can also be heard on 103.5 FM in Wisconsin
The Bloody Disgusting Podcast Network consists of The Horror Show, Women in Caskets, Forever Midnight, Test Pattern, and Virtual Pros. All of these shows can be found on our iTunes Provider Page as well as the Bloody Disgusting App on all iOS and Android devices.
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