Daily Archives: June 4, 2021

Spacewalking cosmonauts will decommission an old space station module early Wednesday. Watch it live! – Space.com

Posted: June 4, 2021 at 3:13 pm

Two Russian cosmonauts will prepare a long-time docking module for eventual dismemberment from the International Space Station during a spacewalk on Wednesday (June 2) and you can watch it live.

Coverage will begin at 1 a.m. EDT (0500 GMT), and you can watch it live here on Space.com or on NASA Television and here at Space.com. Expedition 65 Flight Engineers Oleg Novitskiy and Pyotr Dubrov are expected to start their spacewalk at 1:20 a.m. EDT (0520 GMT). The extravehicular activity, or EVA, should last six and a half hours, although the timing is subject to change depending on how the procedures go.

Novitskiy will have red stripes on his Orlan spacesuit to designate him as lead spacewalker, while Dubrov will wear blue stripes. The cosmonauts both on their first spacewalk will exit the International Space Station (ISS) using the Russian Poisk module.

Video: Russians spacewalk to decommission Pirs in animated explainerRelated: The most memorable spacewalks in history

"The two cosmonauts will disconnect all external mechanical links between Pirs and the station, reposition spacewalk hardware and antennas, and relocate other gear previously used for spacecraft dockings to Pirs," NASA said in a statement. "The cosmonauts also will replace a fluid flow regulator on the nearby Zarya module and replace biological and material science samples on the exterior of the Russian modules," the agency added.

This spacewalk is the second in what will be a series of excursions to decommission Pirs, which has been in space since 2001; previously, cosmonauts performed work on Pirs in November 2020. NASA says this is the sixth spacewalk of 2021 and the 238th spacewalk overall in support of space station assembly, maintenance and upgrades. (Much of the 2021 spacewalk activity so far has been focused on upgrading the ISS solar arrays for at least a few more years of science in orbit.)

Pirs hosts an airlock for spacewalks along with a docking port for Soyuz crewed spacecraft and Progress uncrewed spacecraft. It can also transport fuel between the Russian Zvezda or Zarya modules or docked vehicles, NASA said in a description of the module. This summer, Pirs will be disposed of using an uncrewed Progress cargo ship that will push Pirs towards Earth, NASA added in a blog post

Pirs will be replaced a couple of days later with a new Russian Multi-Purpose Laboratory Module named "Nauka," which is Russian for "science." The long-delayed Nauka was originally supposed to launch in 2007, and after overcoming technical and funding obstacles it will finally launch July 15 from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, according to Spaceflight Now's launch calendar.

"The spacecraft was designed to provide room and facilities for experiments focused on material science and biotechnology," Russian space journalist Anatoly Zak said in a description of Nauka's capabilities on RussianSpaceWeb.com, adding that the module is "designed to provide a number of critical service systems to the Russian segment of the International Space Station."

If all goes to plan, Nauka will extend the science work done on the Kristall module of the Mir space station that the Soviet Union and later, Russia managed in the 1980s and 1990s, Zak said. In November 2020, Roscosmos space chief Dmitry Rogozin said the new module will include a multi-docking hub for the Russian segment of the ISS.

Notably, Roscosmos has discussed forming an independent space station with its newer ISS modules after the end of the international project, which is slated for 2024 with a possible extension to 2028.

Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

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Earth looks spectacular from space: 5 images clicked by astronauts on the Space Station – Firstpost

Posted: at 3:13 pm

FP TrendingJun 04, 2021 17:43:05 IST

NASA astronauts Mark Vande Hei and Shane Kimbrough are currently living on the International Space Station. They and their fellow crew members are constantly greeted with sights of the Earth that we, mere mortals, can only dream of. Recently, these two astronauts managed to capture and share some glorious images of our planet with their fellow earthlings on Twitter. They shared pictures of the Himalayas and Italys Turin, as viewed from space. Here are some of the recent images that the astronauts on the ISS have shared with us:

Hei shared a picture of The Himalayas clicked from space on his Twitter account. The stunning image shows the Himalayas on a clear, bright day. Hei added that he cannot get enough of these images.

While the image of the snow-covered mountains was shared by Hei, Kimbrough gave a treat to the Italians with the picture he shared. He posted a picture of the northern Italian city Turin as seen from space. It seems to be nighttime as lights are glowing in the picture. Kimbrough confirmed it by saying Buona Notte Italia! (Good Night Italy).

Kimbrough also posted pictures of Canada's Montreal explaining to viewers how to spot the Canadian Space Agency (CSA) facility in the images. Several people commented on their tweets, appreciating the beautiful images that were captured from space.

Another astronaut named Thomas Pesquet who is at ISS currently often shares images of cities and regions from space. A stunning image of Egypts capital Cairo was shared by Pesquet recently as part of the #CitiesAtNight series.

The official handle of NASA had also shared an image of Turkeys Istanbul where the city can be seen glowing at night. The image was captured from the ISS as it was orbiting 263 miles above the Black Sea.

Hei is a NASA astronaut who arrived at ISS on 9 April. Shane Kimbrough, another NASA astronaut, reached the station with ESA astronaut Thomas Pesquet in late April.

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Cosmonauts Finish Spacewalk to Ready Space Station for New Module – SciTechDaily

Posted: at 3:13 pm

Cosmonaut Oleg Kononenko is pictured in an Orlan spacesuit with red stripes during a spacewalk in December 11, 2018, to inspect the Soyuz MS-09 crew ship. Credit: NASA

Expedition 65 Flight Engineers Oleg Novitskiy and Pyotr Dubrov of the Russian space agency Roscosmos have completed a spacewalk lasting seven hours and 19 minutes.

The two cosmonauts opened the hatch to the Poisk docking compartment airlock to begin the spacewalk at 1:53 a.m. EDT. They re-entered the airlock and closed the hatch at 9:12 a.m.

Pyotr Dubrovs helmet camera spots Oleg Novitskiy on the other end of the 46-foot-long (14 meters) Strela boom, a Russian crane, that the spacewalkers detached from the Pirs airlock. Credit: NASA

During the spacewalk, the duo disconnected the external mechanical links between Pirs and the space station, relocated spacewalk hardware including a telescoping crane, and reconfigured antennas to prepare the Pirs module for undocking and disposal. Additionally, the cosmonauts replaced a fluid flow regulator panel on the nearby Zarya module, jettisoned the old panel as planned, and replaced biological and material science samples on the exterior of the Russian modules.

Cosmonauts (from left) Oleg Novitskiy and Pyotr Dubrov conducted their first career spacewalks together. Credit: NASA

Pirs will be replaced by the new Russian Multipurpose Laboratory Module, named Nauka, which is Russian for science. The undocking of Pirs is scheduled for this summer, about two days after Nauka launches from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.

This was the first spacewalk for both cosmonauts and the 238th spacewalk overall in support of International Space Station assembly, maintenance, and upgrades. It also marks the sixth spacewalk of 2021.

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China completes another part of its own space station paving the way for astronauts to live there – CNBC

Posted: at 3:13 pm

A Long March-7 Y3 carrier rocket carrying the Tianzhou-2 cargo spacecraft blasts off from the Wenchang Spacecraft Launch Site on May 29, 2021 in Wenchang, Hainan Province of China.

Yuan Chen | VCG | Getty Images

GUANGZHOU, China China has completed another major part of its own space station, the latest in a string of ambitious extraterrestrial projects from the world's second-largest economy.

The Long March 7 rocket carrying the Tianzhou-2 cargo spacecraft took off at 8:55 p.m. local time on Saturday from the Wenchang launch site, according to the China Manned Space agency.

In the early hours of Sunday morning, Tianzhou-2 docked with the core module of the space station called Tianhe.

China's space station will be made of three modules which includes the Tianhe "core," cargo spacecraft such as Tianzhou-2 and laboratories. China will carry out 11 missions this year and next to complete the construction of the space station, and bring astronauts and supplies up too. The space station is expected to go into operation in 2022.

The docking of Tianzhou-2 has paved the way for China to launch astronauts to the space station. The cargo spacecraft carried up astronaut supplies including space suits and food. Shredded pork and kung pao chicken are among the food items transported to space, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

China's first self-developed space station will rival the International Space Station, which is a co-operative effort between the United States, Russia, Europe, Japan, and Canada. China is not involved.

Beijing has been putting a lot of emphasis on ambitious space projects. Last year, China completed its global navigation system called Beidou, a rival to the U.S. government-owned Global Positioning System (GPS).

After China launched its first major Mars mission last year, an unmanned Chinese spacecraft landed successfully on the Red Planet.

However, the Asian giant was criticized this month when the rocket carrying the core module for its space station, re-entered the earth's atmosphere uncontrolled and landed in the Indian Ocean.

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Guilford companys medical invention on shipment headed to the International Space Station – WTNH.com

Posted: at 3:13 pm

GUILFORD, Conn. (WTNH) A big day for Guilford company Butterfly Network with one of their high-tech medical devices launched into space to be used on the international space station.

Company founder Jonathan Rothberg, Ph.D. explains how they took bulky ultrasound technology and put it into a handheld device.

Its the worlds first and only handheld whole-body scanner so you can look into any part of your body by ultrasound which is completely safe and its built based on a semiconductor chip, says Rothberg.

A Butterfly iQ ultrasound device was on the SpaceX Dragon cargo resupply rocket that launched Thursday afternoon, heading for the International Space Station.

Now we can monitor the health of our astronauts every day.

The device connects by telemedicine with a doctor on Earth. It will be tested in the zero-gravity conditions, with the potential to be a key scanning device in long-term space flights like trips to Mars, which will take six months to get there.

Dr. Rothberg has had a long relationship with the NASA program and has other inventions.

Today I handed over to the SpaceX team our Detect and it wont just be for COVID-19, it will be for anything that comes up while youre in the space station so we have to be more self-sufficient.

He says more testing is needed but his test can be reprogrammed to detect any pathogen so the possibilities are endless for its use in space. The invention of the Butterfly iQ was not for space but rather to make medicine equitable and available to all corners of the world.

Were working with 100 charities or nongovernmental organizations to get the butterflyeverywhere where its needed.

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China’s New Space Station Will Be Powered by Ion Propulsion System – Interesting Engineering

Posted: at 3:13 pm

NASA's ion propulsion system

China's upcoming Tiangong space station's first module will be equipped with an ion propulsion system which will greatly improve energy efficiency and could slash journey times to Mars,the South China Morning Post(SCMP) reports.

Such thrusters have been used since the 1970s; however, the Tiangong's core module is set to become the first crewed spaceship propelled by ion drives. China is betting big on ion thrusters and intends to develop them on a far greater scale for its deep-space missions.

The space stations core Tianhe module,which will welcome its first astronauts later this month if all goes to plan, ispropelled by four ion thrusters, which utilize electricity to accelerate ions as a type of propulsion.

When compared to chemical propulsion, which keeps the International Space Station (ISS) in orbit, ion drives are much more efficient. According to the Chinese Academy of Sciences, the ISS's thrusters require four tons of rocket fuel to keep it afloat for a year, whereas ion thrusters would require only 882 pounds (400kg) to do the same.

Today's rocket technology would take a crew aboard a spaceship large enough to carry fuel and other supplies to Mars in more than eight months. However, according to some calculations by researchers, a vehicle powered by a 200-megawatt ion drive array may reduce the journey time to 39 days, allowing the mission to employ smaller vessels or carry more supplies.

It sounds good on paper, but its implementation hasn't been the best due to the thrust created not being significant enough. Most ion thrusters deployed in space, mostly in satellites, generate roughly 1 kilowatt of power, SCMP writes, but China's goal is much more ambitious.

An ion thruster generates thrust by accelerating ions using electricity: It ionizes a neutral gas by removing some electrons from atoms, creating a cloud of positive ions. When fired up, the ion drive emits blue fumes that are created by incredibly hot, electrically charged particles leaving the engine at speeds exceeding 30 times the speed of sound.

These charged particles can degrade engine components, reducing satellite longevity and possibly putting astronauts at risk. Moreover, the thrust is usually fairly low. However, the Chinese Academy of Sciences says they found a way to make it work.

The Chinese scientists put the thrusters through rigorous testing to make sure the engines could resist the damage caused by the particles. By putting a magnetic field over the engine's inner wall to repel damaging particles, they were able to protect the engine from erosion. They also developed a unique ceramic material designed to withstand severe heat or radiation for an extended period of time.m adoption has been hampered by the fact that the thrust produced isnt very significant.

Their ion thruster has reportedly run non-stop for more than 11 months without a hitch.

As space programs all around the world become more ambitious, it will be interesting to see if ion thrusters can be used in ways they have never been done before.

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Nelson to speak with Rogozin on the future of the ISS – SpaceNews

Posted: at 3:13 pm

WASHINGTON NASA Administrator Bill Nelson says he will soon speak with his Russian counterpart in the hopes of continuing long-standing cooperation between the two countries in space even as Russias ties to China grow stronger.

In a discussion with reporters at NASA Headquarters after his State of NASA speech June 2, Nelson said he is scheduled to speak by phone with Dmitry Rogozin, head of the Russian space agency Roscosmos, on June 4, regarding Russias willingness to continue participating in the International Space Station program.

What I hope is that theyre going to think long and hard before they would pull out of the cooperation that they have had with us, he said.

Some Russian officials have suggested in recent months that Russia could pull out of the ISS program as soon as the mid-2020s in favor of a new national space station program. Rogozin, in a June 3 interview with TASS, said that Russia had done all the research it wanted in the space stations orbit, at an inclination of 51 degrees, and argued that a new Russian station in a sun-synchronous orbit would be useful for monitoring Arctic regions.

Rogozin also said in the interview that the aging of the ISS, and growing maintenance costs, was a factor. While he did not commit to ending participation in the station as soon as 2025, he suggested the ISS would not last beyond 2030.

NASA officials have played down the prospects of Russia exiting the ISS partnership. Kathy Lueders, NASAs associate administrator for human exploration and operations, noted after the State of NASA event that two Russian cosmonauts had, earlier in the day, performed a spacewalk lasting more than seven hours to prepare for the removal of the Pirs module. That will free up a port for the new, and long-delayed, Nauka module scheduled for launch July 15.

Launching a new module and activating it is not a sign of pulling out of the relationship, she concluded.

At the same time that Russian officials have proposed ending cooperation with NASA on the ISS, they have taken steps to form a new partnership with China on a proposed International Lunar Research Station. The two countries have invited other nations to join that project, and plan to hold side meetings with prospective partners during the Global Space Exploration (GLEX) Conference later this month in St. Petersburg, Russia.

Nelson, who said he plans to participate virtually in that conference, raised an alarm about growing cooperation between China and Russia in space exploration. Now youre hearing the talk, and serious talk, about Russia and China hitching up together and going to the moon. That is concerning, he said.

Nelson did not mention specific topics for his discussion with Rogozin beyond the future of the ISS partnership. Rogozin said in the TASS interview that he expects to talk with Nelson about proposals to exchange seats between Soyuz and commercial crew vehicles, allowing NASA astronauts to ride on Soyuz spacecraft in exchange for Russian cosmonauts going on Crew Dragon and Starliner vehicles.

Rogozin called Nelson an experienced man in the interview and said he looked forward to his one-on-one call and Nelsons participation at GLEX. The man says wise things, he said of Nelson.

Speaking at a meeting of two National Academies committees May 25, Nelson offered measured praise for Rogozin, who remains sanctioned by the U.S. government for his role as deputy prime minister of Russia during its annexation of Crimea and incursion into eastern Ukraine in 2014.

He has been solid with regard to the continuation of the cooperation with us in space, and I hope that continues, Nelson said of Rogozin. I will certainly urge him to continue that.

Nelson also suggested after the State of NASA event that space may come up during a summit meeting between President Joe Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin June 16 in Geneva. Nelson called Biden a space fan and noted the presidents several public appearances associated with NASA since taking office in January.

When he talks with Vladimir Putin, I bet that will be one of the things on their agenda, Nelson said.

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Astronauts share images of Himalayas and Italy taken from space. Seen them yet? – Hindustan Times

Posted: at 3:13 pm

Two astronauts, currently aboard the International Space Station, took to Twitter to share the images.

By Trisha Sengupta

PUBLISHED ON JUN 03, 2021 08:30 AM IST

If youre a regular user of the Internet, chances are you have seen the various images of Earth captured from the International Space Station (ISS). Amazing, mesmerising, and beautiful, are some among the many adjectives that people often use to react to such pictures. There is a high possibility that youll also be using those words and more after seeing these incredible images shared by two astronauts who are currently aboard ISS.

The first image is tweeted by astronaut Mark T. Vande Hei and it shows the majestic Himalayas. Somewhere on a clear, bright day in the Himalayas. I cant get enough views like this, he wrote while sharing the picture.

Another picture, shared by astronaut Shane Kimbrough, shows an Italian city named Turin. Turin, Italy a city with rich history and culture in northern Italy is easy to spot from @Space_Station, he shared along with the image.

Both the posts received tons of appreciative comments from people. Many expressed their wonder while reacting to the pictures.

What are your thoughts on the images shared by the astronauts?

By Khyati Sanger

PUBLISHED ON MAY 28, 2021 12:24 PM IST

NASA took to Instagram to share a picture of Istanbul, city seems to be glowing.

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China’s New Space Station Is Powered by Ion Thrusters – Futurism

Posted: at 3:13 pm

Chinas first module of its upcoming Tiangong space station makes use of ion drives, technology that could vastly cut down the time it takes to travel to Mars and greatly reduce the amount of fuel needed to make that trip, as the South China Morning Postreports.

The module, called Tianhe and launched in late April, is powered by four ion thrusters that use electricity to accelerate ions as a form of propulsion. In fact, the module could soon become the first spacecraft in history to transport humans using the technology, according to SCMP.

Ion drives are orders of magnitude more efficient compared to chemical propulsion. To keep the International Space Station in orbit for a year, the thrusters consume four tons of rocket fuel. With ion thrusters, itd need just 400 kilograms to stay in orbit for the same amount of time, according to the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

A trip to Mars could be cut down from eight months to just 39 days.

China is betting big on ion thrusters, hoping to use them not just for its space station but for upcoming satellite constellations and nuclear-powered spacecraft capable of carrying astronauts to Mars as well, according to SCMP.

The technology has been around for decades, but mainstream adoption has been hampered by the fact that the thrust produced isnt very significant. Scaling up the thrusters could end up putting astronauts in danger and shorten the lifespan of satellites.

But scientists at the Chinese Academy of Sciences may have cracked the code. One of its ion drives currently in development has been burning for more than 11 months straight, according to the newspaper.

A magnetic field makes sure the particles dont create any damage or erode the engine, while a special ceramic material stops it from getting damaged by radiation.

Space projects are usually very big, an anonymous Beijing-based space scientist told SCMP. A typical mission involves hundreds or even thousands of individuals. But the competition in space is essentially a competition over some very small but extremely important details.

The ion thruster is one of those areas where the devil is in the detail, the scientist added.

READ MORE: How Chinas space station could help power astronauts to Mars[South China Morning Sea]

More on ion thrusters: This Mini Ion Thruster Is Adorably Tiny

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Google and MIT prove social media can slow the spread of fake news – Fast Company

Posted: at 3:10 pm

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the public has been battling a whole other threat: what U.N. Secretary-General Antnio Guterres has called a pandemic of misinformation. Misleading propaganda and other fake news is easily shareable on social networks, which is threatening public health. As many as one in four adults has claimed they will not get the vaccine. And so while we finally have enough doses to reach herd immunity in the United States, too many people are worried about the vaccines (or skeptical that COVID-19 is even a dangerous disease) to reach that threshold.

However, a new study out of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Googles social technology incubator Jigsaw holds some hope to fixing misinformation on social networks. In a massive study involving 9,070 American participantscontrolling for gender, race, and partisanshipresearchers found that a few simple UI interventions can stop people from sharing fake news around COVID-19.

How? Not through literacy that teaches them the difference between reliable sources and lousy ones. And not through content thats been flagged as false by fact checkers, as Facebook has attempted.

Instead researchers introduced several different prompts through a simple popup window, all with a single goal: to get people to think about the accuracy of what theyre about to share. When primed to consider a storys accuracy, people were up to 20% less likely to share a piece of fake news. Its not that weve come up with an intervention you give people once, and theyre set, says MIT professor David Rand, who was also lead author of the study. Instead, the point is that the platforms are, by design, constantly distracting people from accuracy.

An early prototype accuracy prompt asked users to reflect on the accuracy of a news headline before continuing to browse. [Image: Jigsaw]At the beginning of the experiment, people were given a popup prompt, like being asked to rate the accuracy of a neutral headline. One example was, Seinfeld is officially coming to Netflix. This was simply to get them thinking about accuracy. Then they were presented higher-stakes content related to COVID-19 and asked if they would share it. Examples of the COVID-19 headlines people had to parse were, Vitamin C protects against coronavirus (false) and CDC: Coronavirus spread may last into 2021, but impact may be blunted (true). People who were primed to think about the accuracy of headlines were less likely to share false COVID-19 content.

A lot of the time, people can actually tell whats true and false reasonably well. And people say, by and large, they dont want to share inaccurate information, Rand says. But they may do it anyway because theyre distracted, because the social media context focuses their attention on other things [than accuracy].

An animated version of Jigsaws digital literacy tip experience: Variations on this design were tested for efficacy across multiple dimensions. [Image: Jigsaw]What other things? Baby photos. A frenemys new job announcement. The omnipresent social pressure of likes, shares, and follower counts. Rand explains that all of these things add up, and the very design of social media distracts us from our natural discernment.

Even if you are someone who cares about accuracy and is generally a critical thinker, the social media context just turns that part of your brain off, says Rand, who then recounted a time in the past year he discovered that hed shared an inaccurate story online, when he is in fact a researcher on just this topic.

MIT first pioneered the research theory. Then Jigsaw stepped in to collaborate on and fund the work while using its designers to build the prompts. Rocky Cole, research program manager at Jigsaw, says the idea is in incubation at the company, and he doesnt imagine it being utilized in Google products until the company ensures there are no unintended consequences of the work. (Meanwhile, Google subsidiary YouTube is still a dangerous haven for extremist misinformation, promoted by its own suggestive algorithms.)

Through the research, MIT and Jigsaw developed and tested several small interventions that could help snap a person back into a sensible, discerning state of mind. One approach was called an evaluation. All that amounted to was asking someone to evaluate whether a sample headline seemed accurate, to the best of their knowledge. This primed their discerning mode. And when subjects saw a COVID-19 headline after being primed, they were far less likely to share misinformation.

Another approach was called tips. It was just a little box that urged the user to Be skeptical of headlines. Investigate the source. Watch for unusual formatting. Check the evidence. Yet another approach was called importance, and it simply asked users how important it is for them to share only accurate stories on social media. Both of these approaches worked to curb the sharing of misinformation by about 10%.

An approach that didnt work was around partisan norms, which was a prompt that explained how both Republicans and Democrats felt it was important to share only accurate information on social media. Interestingly, when this norms approach was mixed with the tips approach or the importance approach, guess what? Tips and importance both became more effective. The overall conclusion is you can do lots of different things that prime the concept of accuracy in different ways, and they all pretty much work, Rand says. You dont need a special magical perfect way of doing it.

The only problem is that we still dont understand a key piece of the puzzle: How long do these prompts work? When do their effects wear off? Do users begin to tune them out?

Id hypothesize [these effects are] quite ephemeral, Cole says. The theory suggests people care about accuracy . . . but they see a cute cat video online and suddenly theyre not thinking about accuracy, theyre thinking about something else. And the more you see accuracy prompts, the easier it is to ignore them.

These unknowns point to avenues for future research. In the meantime, we do know that we have tools at our disposal, which can be easily incorporated into social media platforms, to help curb the spread of misinformation.

To keep people sharing accurate information, sites could require a constant feed of novel ways to get users to think about accuracy. Rand points to a prompt Twitter released during the last presidential election. He considers this prompt to be a very good bit of design, as it asks readers if they want to read an article before retweeting it, reminding them about the topic of accuracy. But Twitter has not updated the prompt in the many months since, and its probably less effective as a result, he says. The first time [I saw that] it was like Whoa! Shit!' Rand says. Now its like, yeah, yeah.'

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