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      Six children among latest Ebola cases in Uganda’s capital as outbreak grows

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Thursday, 27 October, 2022 - 22:14

    Red Cross workers don PPE prior to burying a 3-year-old boy suspected of dying from Ebola in 2022 in Mubende, Uganda.

    Enlarge / Red Cross workers don PPE prior to burying a 3-year-old boy suspected of dying from Ebola in 2022 in Mubende, Uganda. (credit: Getty | Luke Dray )

    Concern is rising over the ongoing Ebola outbreak in Uganda that is now swiftly spreading in the densely populated capital city of Kampala. The outbreak is caused by a lesser-seen species of Ebolavirus, the Sudan virus, for which there is no proven vaccine or treatment.

    Uganda's Ministry of Health declared an outbreak on September 20, a day after a 24-year-old man from a rural area in central Uganda died of the disease . Since then, the virus has spread to seven districts in the country, with the ministry reporting a total of 109 confirmed cases and 30 deaths. Health workers accounted for 15 of the confirmed cases and six of the confirmed deaths. There are also unofficial reports of probable cases and deaths.

    Health experts are particularly concerned about the spread into Kampala, which government officials reported only Sunday. As of Wednesday, the city of more than 1.6 million has seen at least 15 confirmed cases. Of the 15 cases, six are school-aged children from the same family.

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      Monkeypox: 25K cases, a batch of new deaths, and 3 state emergencies

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Tuesday, 2 August, 2022 - 23:36 · 1 minute

    NYC Monkeypox Vaccine Clinic sign is displayed on August 2 in The Bronx borough of  New York. Mayor Eric Adams declared a state of emergency because of Monkeypox, allowing him to suspend certain laws and regulations to enact rules and policies aimed at combatting the fast-spreading virus.

    Enlarge / NYC Monkeypox Vaccine Clinic sign is displayed on August 2 in The Bronx borough of New York. Mayor Eric Adams declared a state of emergency because of Monkeypox, allowing him to suspend certain laws and regulations to enact rules and policies aimed at combatting the fast-spreading virus. (credit: Getty | View press )

    As global monkeypox cases continue to climb, health officials are investigating reports of several new deaths, which includes the first batch of deaths reported from countries outside where the virus is endemic in animals.

    The global case count is now over 25,000, with more than 6,000 in the US. The global death toll is now at least 10. Previously, officials reported three deaths from Nigeria and two from the Central African Republic , both of which have historically reported monkeypox spillover cases. On Monday, Ghana, which has also historically had cases, reported its first death . At the same time, four new deaths have been reported in Spain (2), Brazil (1), and India (1). Officials at the World Health Organization are still waiting for more clinical information on the cases.

    Initial media reports suggest that the death in Brazil was a 41-year-old man who had lymphoma and was immunocompromised and was therefore at higher risk of severe disease.

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      BA.5 skyrockets in US, now accounting for 78% of cases

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Tuesday, 19 July, 2022 - 22:11

    BA.5 skyrockets in US, now accounting for 78% of cases

    Enlarge (credit: Getty | Spencer Platt )

    The omicron coronavirus subvariant BA.5 is hurtling toward complete domination in the US, now accounting for an estimated 78 percent of the country's cases—which are also on the rise.

    The breakneck takeover is stunning, with BA.5 showing a significant growth advantage over all other lineages and sublineages. In the US, that seems to include BA.4, which shares the same spike protein mutations but has differing mutations elsewhere in its genome.

    At the start of June, BA.5 accounted for less than 10 percent of cases, with BA.4 lagging slightly, accounting for an estimated 6.4 percent. Since then, BA.5 has blasted ahead to 78 percent, while BA.4 peaked at 14.4 percent early in July and has now declined to 12.8 percent.

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      CDC presumes community spread of monkeypox; 9 cases now in 7 states

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Thursday, 26 May, 2022 - 23:15

    A 2003 photo of the arms and legs of a 4-year-old girl infected with monkeypox in Liberia.

    Enlarge / A 2003 photo of the arms and legs of a 4-year-old girl infected with monkeypox in Liberia. (credit: Getty | BSIP )

    Monkeypox is presumed to have spread within the US, and nine cases have now been identified in seven states, according to the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Rochelle Walensky.

    In a press briefing Thursday, Walensky said the nine cases were from Massachusetts, New York, Florida, Utah, Washington, California, and Virginia. Most of the nine cases had recent international travel to areas with active monkeypox cases, but not all.

    "We need to presume that there is some community spread," Walensky said. "But there is active contact tracing that is happening right now to understand whether and how these cases might have been in contact with each other or with others in other countries."

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      Sixth child in US dies of unexplained hepatitis as global cases top 600

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 20 May, 2022 - 22:40

    Liver lesions in patient with chronic active hepatitis C.

    Enlarge / Liver lesions in patient with chronic active hepatitis C. (credit: Getty | BSIP )

    A sixth child has died in the United States from puzzling liver inflammation—aka hepatitis—and the number of unexplained cases has risen to 180 across 36 states, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    The latest death was announced in a press briefing Friday, led by CDC Deputy Director for Infectious Diseases Jay Butler, who said it was reported to the agency Thursday. He did not indicate in which state the death occurred.

    In addition to the deaths, 15 of the 180 cases required liver transplants, Butler reported. The cases all occurred in children under the age of 10 but skewed to preschool-age children, with the median age being around 2 years.

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      Omicron subvariant BA.2.12.1 now 36.5% of US cases, can evade BA.1 antibodies

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Tuesday, 3 May, 2022 - 22:05

    A medical worker arranges nucleic acid samples at a makeshift nucleic acid testing site on May 3, 2022 in Beijing, China.

    Enlarge / A medical worker arranges nucleic acid samples at a makeshift nucleic acid testing site on May 3, 2022 in Beijing, China. (credit: Getty | Pang Songgang )

    The omicron subvariant BA.2.12.1 is poised to become dominant in the US, currently accounting for an estimated 36.5 percent of all US SARS-CoV-2 cases, according to the latest estimates released Tuesday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    The subvariant's ascent is the latest rapid succession of omicron subvariants, from the sky-scraping peak of cases from the initial omicron subvariant BA.1 in January, to the current bump driven by the subvariant BA.2, which achieved dominance in March. As before, the reason for the viral usurping is that omicron subvariants continue to evolve advantages: BA.2.12.1 has a transmission advantage over BA.2, which had a transmission advantage over BA.1, which had a significant advantage over delta.

    The imminent reign of BA.2.12.1 raises concern for yet another wave of infections and poses questions about how effective future omicron-specific vaccines could be against symptomatic infections.

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      pubsub.kikeriki.at / bearblog · Saturday, 8 January, 2022 - 01:00 · 7 minutes

    hCaptcha is a reCAPTCHA clone that has been growing in popularity over 2020 and 2021, in particular due to Cloudflare’s conversion of their nag screens from Google’s reCAPTCHA to hCaptcha. Although hCaptcha advertises itself as being a privacy-conscious alternative to reCAPTCHA, there’s also an incentive for websites to switch over: hCaptcha will pay websites each time one of their users completes a hCaptcha challenge.

    <p>hCaptcha is a reCAPTCHA clone that has been growing in popularity over 2020 and 2021, in particular due to Cloudflare’s conversion of their nag screens from Google’s reCAPTCHA to hCaptcha. Although hCaptcha advertises itself as being a privacy-conscious alternative to reCAPTCHA, there’s also an incentive for websites to switch over: hCaptcha will pay websites each time one of their users completes a hCaptcha challenge.</p> <p>Now the question is: how does you completing a captcha earn anyone money? Of course, hCaptcha is a VC-funded business, so it can afford to burn money in the pursuit of market share; nonetheless there needs to be a plausible business model there, and it’s not obvious at first sight.</p> <p>If you read the <a href="https://www.hcaptcha.com">hCaptcha website</a>, they suggest that AI startups will pay them to label their images for them. <sup id="fnref:1" role="doc-noteref"><a href="#fn:1" class="footnote" rel="footnote">1</a></sup> Labelling images is a labour-intensive task and required for some current-generation machine learning approaches. AI startups are well-funded and have money to spend on labelling, so this sounds like a reasonable case of selling shovels during a gold rush. But the output from solving CAPTCHAs isn’t obviously isomorphic to the type of labelling required for machine learning, which is often quite specific and requires a very low error rate.</p> <p>Complex CAPTCHA challenges are not possible, as web users turn out to be drunk, blind, 3 years old, or just randomly clicking buttons to get this infernal thing to go away. Accordingly, hCaptcha challenges are simple: select the images that match a simple 1-3 word prompt from a 3x3 grid. This is fortunately easy for most real people. <sup id="fnref:2" role="doc-noteref"><a href="#fn:2" class="footnote" rel="footnote">2</a></sup> <sup id="fnref:3" role="doc-noteref"><a href="#fn:3" class="footnote" rel="footnote">3</a></sup></p> <p>The most common prompts seem to be selecting buses, trucks, boats or trains out of the grid.<sup id="fnref:4" role="doc-noteref"><a href="#fn:4" class="footnote" rel="footnote">4</a></sup> The market demand for this sort of simple labelling must be rather limited, even if challenges have to be repeated many times and cross-checked to get an acceptable error rate.</p> <p>So far, a little inscrutable but all seems sensible enough. But then it all gets interesting when you actually take a look at the images in a little more detail:</p> <p><img src="https://bearbin.net/images/captcha/1.png" alt="hCaptcha example" /></p> <p>Starting from the top left and going right, we have:</p> <ul> <li>A boat that appears to have been painted by Dalí, with a mast drooping like a wet noodle.</li> <li>A plane with tricycle landing gear, except it’s got two sets of wheels at the front and one at the back. That’s not normal!</li> <li>A normal looking plane with some odd-looking clouds above.</li> <li>A bus with an axle in front of the door, and another behind it, and another at the back. Hmm</li> <li>A boat in a marina made of splodges.</li> <li>A normal-looking boat on a normal-looking sea, except - look at that horizon! How did that happen.</li> <li>A single-decker london bus with a ghost of it’s double-decker cousin above. And a giant moth perched on it at the back.</li> <li>Another ghostly upper deck on a regional bus.</li> <li>A sailing boat with some oddly stylised “alien” writing on the sail.</li> </ul> <p>These images are obviously AI-generated. They have all the hallmarks of GAN output, with typical artifacts and oddities. <a href="https://bearbin.net/images/captcha/2.png">Have</a> <a href="https://bearbin.net/images/captcha/3.png">some</a> <a href="https://bearbin.net/images/captcha/4.png">more</a> and see if you can spot the same things in these other challenges - it’s not hard at all, is it!</p> <p>The question then is why? Why would hCaptcha be generating these challenges - aren’t they supposed to be labelling real life, not some AI mirages? You know the labels before you generate them, what’s the point in using humans to re-label them again… And why are the results so bad - these are definitely not state of the art!</p> <p>The only explanation that makes sense is that hCaptcha is not really doing this whole AI-labelling business at all, or if they are it’s only in very limited fashion. Most of the time they’re just using a GAN to generate images that defeat the bots’ image recognition AI. And the GAN isn’t trained to optimise human recognition, rather to confound the bots in an arms race, leading to the bad image quality.</p> <p>If you have any better ideas I’d be glad to hear them because this whole thing doesn’t really make much sense.</p> <p>Footnotes:</p> <div class="footnotes" role="doc-endnotes"> <ol> <li id="fn:1" role="doc-endnote"> <p>If you look closer, they have an <a href="https://medium.com/hcaptcha-blog/hcaptcha-technical-architecture-high-level-design-4373a8c944b2">article that purports to explain the “technical architecture of hCaptcha”</a> which is a supreme example of buzzword-stuffing blockchain-washed nothing. There is less than zero need for a blockchain to track customer requests, much less the public Ethereum blockchain, but it’s the buzzword of the month so it must go in. <a href="#fnref:1" class="reversefootnote" role="doc-backlink">&#8617;</a></p> </li> <li id="fn:2" role="doc-endnote"> <p><em>Most</em> real users, that is. There are some users for whom the challenge is actually too hard, or who’ve been blackholed and are interpreting bad IP reputation as poor skill. But the ones who fall down most often are those who try too hard and analyse the prompt and challenge in too much detail. The real way to solve these image challenges is to answer what you think <em>other people will answer</em>, rather than the <em>correct answer</em>. And don’t take too long either, just a quick glance is all your competition are giving! Anecdotally, this isn’t too common with hCaptcha, but reCAPTCHA challenges are extremely prone to this failure if you think too hard. <a href="#fnref:2" class="reversefootnote" role="doc-backlink">&#8617;</a></p> </li> <li id="fn:3" role="doc-endnote"> <p>Unfortunately <a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/SPW53761.2021.00061">this is also quite easy for bots</a>, somewhat subverting the point of a CAPTCHA, so that’s how browser fingerprinting and IP reputation creep in to get reasonable enough results. <a href="#fnref:3" class="reversefootnote" role="doc-backlink">&#8617;</a></p> </li> <li id="fn:4" role="doc-endnote"> <p>These prompts are so common that a <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=29838908">front-page post on Hacker News</a> consisted of this observation (and prompted me to write up my thoughts on the topic from the past few months). <a href="#fnref:4" class="reversefootnote" role="doc-backlink">&#8617;</a></p> </li> </ol> </div>
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      pubsub.kikeriki.at / bearblog · Thursday, 23 December, 2021 - 21:30 · 3 minutes

    Following on from my post yesterday about an edge case in YouTube, I thought I’d write about a class of edge cases perhaps even more strange that I’ve been exploring recently:

    <p>Following on from <a href="drinking-from-the-firehose-youtube-music">my post yesterday about an edge case in YouTube</a>, I thought I’d write about a class of edge cases perhaps even more strange that I’ve been exploring recently:</p> <p>Search engines are a fact of daily life for most of the population nowadays. Google (sub your preferred provider) is an extension of the brain, imagined as giving you access to the sum of the world’s information at the click of a button. But a search engine isn’t just a Ctrl-F for the internet with a nice interface and ads; rather it’s a tremendously complicated system with lots of features and interactions between those features. And all you need to explore the system yourself is some well-tuned search queries.</p> <p>I recently had an epiphany: search engines are designed to find you results for <em>something</em> and that’s a job they perform well. But there’s nothing stopping you from searching for <em>nothing</em>! And the search engines will still give you results!</p> <p>And what results they are - have a go on the links below:</p> <p>An empty query on DDG: <a href="https://duckduckgo.com/?q=%2B&quot;&quot;">https://duckduckgo.com/?q=+””</a><br /> A different empty query on DDG: <a href="https://duckduckgo.com/?q=(&quot;&quot;)">https://duckduckgo.com/?q=(“”)</a><br /> An empty query on Google: <a href="https://www.google.com/search?q=(&quot;&quot;)">https://www.google.com/search?q=(“”)</a><br /> An empty query on Google News: <a href="https://www.google.com/search?q=%22%22&amp;tbm=nws">https://www.google.com/search?q=”“&amp;tbm=nws</a></p> <p>And have you ever thought about doing an <em>anything but</em> search? Normally you can add negations to the end of your search term to remove unwanted results, but there’s nothing stopping you from having a search term consisting entirely of negations!</p> <p>Here’s one on DDG: <a href="https://duckduckgo.com/?q=-&quot;an+entirely+negated+query&quot;">https://duckduckgo.com/?q=-“an entirely negated query”</a><br /> On Bing: <a href="https://www.bing.com/search?q=-%22an%2Bentirely%2Bnegated%2Bquery%22">https://www.bing.com/search?q=-“an entirely negated query”</a><br /> And on Google Books: <a href="https://www.google.com/search?q=-%22nothing%2Bto%2Bsee%2Bhere%22&amp;tbm=bks">https://www.google.com/search?q=-“nothing to see here”&amp;tbm=bks</a></p> <h2 id="commentary">Commentary</h2> <p>Google appears to have some half-effective filtering for these empty search queries so you’ll mostly get the same two YouTube videos as a result - is this an Easter egg? Although Google News and Books don’t have any filter, and you do get some odd results there!</p> <p>DuckDuckGo doesn’t appear to have any filtering at all, although it’s obvious just how much DDG relies on Bing’s whitelabel product for its results by looking at how similar the two are.</p> <p>If you can think of a deeper reason for these results, please do leave a comment and lets try and explain some of the mystery away.</p>
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      pubsub.kikeriki.at / bearblog · Wednesday, 22 December, 2021 - 23:30 · 4 minutes

    Nowadays YouTube is a great place to listen to music, because everything is there. There’s such a wide selection of to listen to - seriously - the permissive ask-for-forgiveness1 bazaar means that if you search for it, it’ll be there. Make your own playlist, and when it’s time to add something new to you, it’ll be there. Alternatively, just be guided by the flow and don’t worry about where it’s all coming from. For all the perils of YouTube’s arbitrary Copyright system, the variety of music it allows is certainly a benefit. When videos are allowed by default, and the normal punishment after detection of your copyright infringement is a few cents from ads going to the labels, you get channels like ultradiskopanorama uploading rare classics that were never going to go on a service like Spotify. ↩

    <p>Nowadays YouTube is a great place to listen to music, because everything is there. There’s such a wide selection of to listen to - seriously - the permissive ask-for-forgiveness<sup id="fnref:1" role="doc-noteref"><a href="#fn:1" class="footnote" rel="footnote">1</a></sup> bazaar means that if you search for it, it’ll be there. Make your own playlist, and when it’s time to add something new to you, it’ll be there. Alternatively, just be guided by the flow and don’t worry about where it’s all coming from.</p> <p>And to that point, discovery is where YouTube really excels - The Algorithm knows what genres you like, and what you’ve listened to before, and there’ll always be an old favourite ready to listen again or something new, but familiar, to experience for the first time. Training time is minimal, because The Algorithm is a simple beast really (do you really think AlphaGooYou is going to waste resources on a complex model).</p> <p>That said, sometimes you just want a change, and it’s hard to switch off completely. If you log out and clear your cookies, you’ll get music, sure; but it’ll be the worst dregs of contemporary nongenre, optimised for the dying radio sector. Not worth it! What you need is a quick way to jump out of your filter bubble: a random mode, a shuffle play, to say. And floating there in the aether, an odd edge case at the margins of the beast, it actually exists:</p> <p>Here it is, the snappily named: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=UUkeVFb3rrRYgcmcD1F8Bsag">“Uploads from Various Artists - Topic”</a> Playlist. 20000 entries, all songs just recently uploaded to YouTube in the past week or so. Go ahead: break into a brand new song with 0 lifetime views!, Enjoy a random cyrillic-lettered song you can’t understand!, Use it as an infinite radio - whole new songs being added faster than you can listen to them!</p> <p>Although I don’t completely understand why this exists, it seems to be a quirk in the YouTube partner music upload programme: music rightsholders (or those who purport to be) can upload music to YouTube<sup id="fnref:2" role="doc-noteref"><a href="#fn:2" class="footnote" rel="footnote">2</a></sup> in bulk and these are arranged into “Topic Channels” for each artist. These “Channels” inhabit the half-space between a real channel and a playlist - you can subscribe but there’s no real person on the other side of the curtain; certainly there’s no community there. And it seems, on one end or the other, that in the absence of any better information everything just gets unceremoniously dumped into the “Uploads from Various Artists - Topic” topic channel playlist.</p> <p>Either way, it may be quirk, and an odd one at that; but it’s fun and it should be saved. Please don’t take it away, oh wondrous BigTech…</p> <h2 id="footnotes">Footnotes</h2> <div class="footnotes" role="doc-endnotes"> <ol> <li id="fn:1" role="doc-endnote"> <p>For all the perils of YouTube’s arbitrary Copyright system, the variety of music it allows is certainly a benefit. When videos are allowed by default, and the normal punishment after detection of your copyright infringement is a few cents from ads going to the labels, you get channels like <a href="https://www.youtube.com/user/ultradiskopanorama">ultradiskopanorama</a> uploading rare classics that were never going to go on a service like Spotify. <a href="#fnref:1" class="reversefootnote" role="doc-backlink">&#8617;</a></p> </li> <li id="fn:2" role="doc-endnote"> <p>These videos always have “Auto-generated by YouTube” in the description, and all have their comments turned off (sadly a recent change). <a href="#fnref:2" class="reversefootnote" role="doc-backlink">&#8617;</a></p> </li> </ol> </div>