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Daily Archives: January 12, 2024
Influencer seeks dismissal from suit on free speech grounds – Audacy
Posted: January 12, 2024 at 2:09 pm
Attorneys for an influencer sued for libel and slander by a Koreatown plastic surgery and laser treatment center argue in new court papers that the complaint should be dismissed on free-speech grounds, citing the late chef and author Anthony Bourdain as part of their arguments.
"Horrible, horrible place. There's so many places in Koreatown, and Wave is definitely on the list to do not go, and they actually treated me the worst than any place I've walked into," defendant Tina Kim said, according to the Los Angeles Superior Court lawsuit brought by WAVE Plastic Surgery and Aesthetic Laser Center.
But according to court papers filed Tuesday with Judge Maureen Duffy- Lewis, Kim's comments on her TikTok post, a video of 3 minutes, 16 seconds, are protected speech.
"Imagine a world where the late Anthony Bourdain faced a lawsuit for his online criticism and opinion of a cuisine he tried, filed by the owner of the establishment that served the cuisine, freedom of speech would be stifled, and the free flow of information could be hindered due to the fear of having to spend substantial amounts of money defending against such lawsuit," Kim's lawyers state in their anti-SLAPP motion.
The state's anti-SLAPP -- Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation -- law is intended to prevent people from using courts, and potential threats of a lawsuit, to intimidate those who are exercising their First Amendment rights.
The business sued Kim "simply because plaintiff and its owner, Dr. Peter Lee, did not appreciate what (Kim) had to say about the treatment she received during her visit to plaintiff's facility," the anti-SLAPP motion states.
According to the suit filed Dec. 7, WAVE "provides a luxurious environment for patients desiring outstanding outpatient surgery" and the staff and providers "strive to provide cutting-edge and state-of-the-art technology and services for patients in the field of aesthetic and anti-aging plastic surgery."
WAVE has industry-leading doctors who specialize in many surgical and non-surgical procedures and has offices in Los Angeles, Costa Mesa, Arcadia, Rowland Heights and San Francisco, according to the suit, which further states that Kim has more than 86,000 TikTok followers and 4.5 million combined likes on all her TikTok posts.
The video at issue was posted Nov. 7 by Kim through her public account, @kdramalogic, and is titled "My review of walking into Wave Plastic Surgery Center in Koreatown L.A." the suit states.
"I walked in, I walked towards the reception, none of them greeted me," Kim said, according to the suit. "Nothing. Nothing. I walked back up towards the reception area and there (are) three girls there. One is like on the phone. The other one is kinda just talking, and I'm just standing there, and you would think one of the three girls would go, `Oh, hey, so can I help you, do you have an questions?' Nothing, nothing."
When Kim left the business, she made a disparaging remark to the front desk employees, made a thumbs-down gesture and identified herself as an influencer, the suit states.
New customer sign ups have dropped sharply at WAVE since the Kim video's posting, according to the suit, which further alleges Kim intentionally published the video and its false statements with the malicious intent to drive business and customers away from WAVE and toward the plaintiff's competitors.
In a sworn declaration in support of her dismissal motion, Kim says she has appeared worldwide as a comedian and that she posts "various fun and entertaining video reviews on my TikTok page from topics ranging from Korean Pop music, to Kdramas, places to get cheap eats, where to get your haircut, facials and other face work done in Koreatown, where I live, and in Seoul Korea as part my TikTok postings."
Kim says she also often visits plastic surgery facilities in Los Angeles and Korea and posts videos on her TikTok page about her experiences because "people love knowing about Botox and the latest face laser treatments and facials."
Kim further says she had a previous unpleasant customer service experience with WAVE and decided to give them another chance when she was in the area on Nov. 7 after leaving a bank.
"Wave had no customers inside and it was dead silent when I entered its lobby," Kim says. "When I walked in, there were three individuals sitting behind the front desk. None of these individuals greeted me or even acknowledged my presence. I also found the information they list online about them being a luxury outpatient surgery service, acceptance of walk-ins and the quality in which they treat clients to be far from the truth and misleading."
Kim says she waited for what seemed like 15 minutes to be acknowledged.
"All of them could clearly see me standing there and all three just ignored me as I stood a few feet away," Kim says. "I have never been treated so poorly at any face clinic and as I was at the door, I turned around and told them they're getting a bad review and that I am influencer, to which they still ignored me. They treated me as if I didn't even exist."
Kim says she has received about 670 comments on her video post. A hearing on Kim's dismissal motion is scheduled April 16.
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Opinion: Campus culture wars are a teachable moment in how freedom of speech and academic freedom differ – The Globe and Mail
Posted: at 2:09 pm
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A protester in convocation garb and a keffiyeh scarf attends a Nov. 20 protest at Columbia University, where students, alumni and supporters criticized the school for banning the groups Justice in Palestine and Jewish Voice for Peace.Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images
Jacob T. Levy is the chair of the department of political science and Tomlinson Professor of Political Theory at McGill University.
Across the United States and Canada, universities are struggling to navigate the politics of the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel and the subsequent war in Gaza. Here in Montreal, campus politics reached its ugliest point about a month into the conflict, with violence between opposing groups of student protesters at Concordia, and the extraordinary suspension of a University of Montreal lecturer who was involved in the Concordia episode. Since then, things have been quieter here but not everywhere. Six Canadian universities are being sued for allegedly failing to protect Jewish students from a hostile antisemitic environment. Demands to suppress the speech of pro-Palestinian student protesters have reached as high as the U.S. Congress, and have cost two elite university presidents their jobs.
Particularly in the U.S., the complexity of the current moment has been aggravated by the demonization of higher education in the highly polarized culture wars of the past decade. But even without that external political environment, the very acute disagreements about Israel and Palestine highlight how little shared understanding there is between different university constituencies, and between universities and the general public, about how to handle heated debate on campus.
This is partly because the principles governing university life are in some ways strange and counterintuitive, so theyre complicated to defend and tempting to abandon. Its also partly because educators havent put in the work defending them. Many institutions of higher education have let some of the resources and credibility they need in a moment like this slip away, and this crisis should spur them to rebuild those resources and credibility before the next one inevitably arrives.
The highest-profile development in the post-Oct. 7 academic troubles was the Dec. 5 U.S. House of Representatives committee hearing grilling the leaders of Harvard, MIT and the University of Pennsylvania, and the subsequent resignation of two of them, Harvards Claudine Gay and Penns Elizabeth Magill. While there were idiosyncrasies about both cases Dr. Magill had been under fire about perceived campus antisemitism before Oct. 7, and in the end Dr. Gay was brought down by allegations of plagiarism the core problem at those universities was much the same as it has been elsewhere.
Harvard's then-president Claudine Gay testifies on Capitol Hill on Dec. 5 alongside her University of Pennsylvania counterpart, Liz Magill. Both would resign weeks later.Mark Schiefelbein/The Associated Press
Opinion about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is, of course, highly polarized to begin with. Undergraduate activists on any issue are often prone to immoderation. And North American universities include a diverse mix of Jewish, Muslim and Arab students (and faculty and staff), including many who are themselves from Israel or the Palestinian Territories, or who have family connections there. And so the Hamas terrorist attacks on Israeli civilians prompted two immediate responses. One was a combination of mourning and fear on the part of Jews, including Israelis and those with family ties to Israel. And one was an activist mobilization in support of Palestinian rights, a mobilization that included some early endorsements of armed resistance to Israel that were ignorant of the actual scale of the attacks, some that werent, and some pre-emptive attention to the violent Israeli response that was sure to follow. Jewish members of university communities were outraged and frightened, and appealed to university leaders to denounce the attacks and denounce, if not suppress, the pro-Palestinian protest speech. Different universities answered these appeals differently, but at many, the responses were deemed insufficient by Jewish students and alumni. As the Israeli counterattack unfolded, expanded and persisted, counterappeals were made: If the university took a stand against the Hamas attacks, why would it not also take a stand against the devastation Israel was unleashing on Gaza? These werent the only questions that divided campuses, but they were the ones that prompted the congressional hearings on whether the protesters speech tendentiously characterized as advocating the genocide of Jews was being sufficiently restricted.
There have been a lot of sources of confusion in the debate about all this. One is that universities offer very robust protection for political and protest speech, but as an incidental byproduct, not in the same deliberate way that a liberal democratic society does. A universitys core commitment is to the discovery, transmission and preservation of knowledge paradigmatically, what is done in research, in teaching, and in publication and library collection. The principle that defends that commitment is not freedom of speech as such, but rather academic freedom.
A member of the Jewish Student Union of Germany speaks at a silent protest in Berlin on Dec. 15, in response to a pro-Palestinian group's occupation of a university lecture hall.Annegret Hilse/Reuters
Academic freedom has a few moving parts:
First, the freedom to follow arguments and evidence where they lead, according to scholarly methods. The researcher, or for that matter the student writing a paper for a class, is free to reach unpopular conclusions and to overturn established ideas, provided that they can support and defend those conclusions.
Second, the freedom to teach, within the confines of the scholarly mission of the class, and limited by the freedom of students to be secure that they will be assessed fairly. These limits mean that professors need to stick to the subject as that is defined by their scholarly community or discipline; when assigned to teach astronomy, they cant teach astrology. They also mean that the front of the classroom isnt a pulpit or a political platform. But within those constraints, professors have substantial freedom to choose their pedagogical approach, their course materials, which ideas to emphasize, which skills to teach and so on.
And finally, freedom from evaluation on non-academic grounds, of which the traditionally most important are political and religious grounds. Members of the academic community are only to be academically evaluated, for purposes ranging from student grades to professors tenure, on the grounds of the success of their academic work. They may not lose academic standing (student enrolment, faculty employment and so on) for their views and speech on other questions. In the early 20th-century cases that helped shape this rule, universities came to the understanding that, say, an economist couldnt be fired for being an atheist, a mathematician for being a socialist; what they had to say on those political and religious questions was irrelevant to their work. The technical phrase here is freedom of extramural speech outside the walls of the laboratory, the classroom and the library. Protections of extramural speech are very strong, not primarily in order to protect that speech, but in order to protect the academic integrity of what goes on inside the laboratory, classroom and library.
A rule that has traditionally accompanied and strengthened academic freedom is institutional neutrality. If academic freedom is the ability of scholars and scholarly communities or disciplines to work without having an orthodoxy imposed on them, institutional neutrality is the commitment not to declare an orthodoxy in the first place. Just like a professor at the front of a classroom shouldnt use it as a pulpit to announce their own political and religious views, so too should the university as a whole not adopt substantive political or religious opinions that would chill the freedom of its members to pursue their own ideas and arguments. A great deal of important political inquiry and debate happens at a university, but its undertaken by students and professors with differing views pursuing differing arguments, not by the institution as a whole declaring official conclusions.
Universities sometimes need to speak up in favour of their own institutional interests or the general needs of higher education. A few university decisions unavoidably require substantive moral judgments about political figures: whose contributions are worth honouring with an honorary degree, whose career involved so much injustice that their name should be stripped from buildings. But when theres not that kind of necessary connection to university business, the institution should stay silent and neutral, to guarantee the freedom of students and professors to inquire, criticize and debate.
Faculty, staff and students at York University in Toronto walk out on Nov. 28 to support academics arrested for allegedly vandalizing an Indigo store.Chris Young/The Canadian Press
These principles generate some surprising and strange outcomes. For example, the odd thing about the centrality of student protests to important moments in university life is that they are so irrelevant to the universitys mission. There is very strong protection for the freedom of protest, not because protest is important to a university the way it is to a democratic society, but because its academically irrelevant. Its wrong to question a students (or professors) standing in the academic community because of what they say at a protest or on social media, or in any other non-academic setting. The only appropriate limits are not about the content of whats said, but about the conduct of the protest action; the university has to protect not only the safety of its other members but also the security of its academic functions. It cant rule against the language on a sign, but it must intervene to prevent violence between students, or occupations and blockades that would prevent a class from meeting, or an invited speaker from speaking.
This is easier said than done. Universities have very good reason to avoid deploying the force of campus security officers or regular police against students, even when those students threaten core campus activities and thus the rights of other students. Escalation, overreach and the chilling of legitimate protest are all constant dangers; and the whole student body, including the protesters, is part of the academic community. Police helicopters and billy clubs on campus are always a sign of failure. But waiting until a wrongful protest ends peacefully and then taking action against the protesters requires knowing their identities, and it doesnt take much of a face covering to make that difficult. So universities have often ended up shrugging off such protests, with occasional unpredictable bursts of punitive seriousness. These are genuine problems that dont lend themselves to straightforward solutions, but many universities have probably erred too far in the direction of the shrug, letting the belief grow that classes may be disrupted or speakers blockaded without consequence.
Swiss police scuffle with anti-war protesters at the University of Lausanne on Nov. 16, where the French and Swiss presidents were visiting campus.Cyril Zingaro/Keystone via AP
The freedom-through-indifference that is the universitys correct stance toward protests doesnt, however, satisfy the protesters. When you bring together lots of energetic young adults at the life stage when theyre most politically idealistic and least weighed down by competing responsibilities, when you put them in an environment of intellectual ferment, you get activism. Sometimes this has made student activist movements important parts of social and political change or reform. More often the activism is experienced by those who take part in it as morally critical and personally transformative. And when thinking about the issues that inspire their hopes or their anger, they often want more from the university than indifference. They want affirmation: for the institution to announce its commitment to the cause, to devote educational resources to it, to reallocate its endowment or spending in support of it, to suppress the speech of those who oppose it.
It can be hard for institutions to resist, particularly when faculty and administrators are broadly sympathetic to the same cause as the students. So they let institutional neutrality slip, making declarations and symbolic statements affirming that the university is on the side of all good things when its not the job of a university to be on a side at all. An increasing habit of this in the past decade pronouncements on non-university political questions from abortion to police violence to the Russia-Ukraine war left a disaster waiting to happen.
Happen it did, in the autumn of 2023 when the members of university communities conspicuously did not all sympathize with the same cause. When faced with demands to denounce Hamas, or student activists who endorsed Palestinian armed resistance, or Israel, or Zionist speech on campus, or whatever, universities often fell back on the rule of institutional neutrality. But critics found it hard to take that rule seriously any more because, they said, the institution had shown that it didnt take it seriously either. By the same token, the rule that the university shouldnt take any interest in the rhetoric thats used in a protest or on social media was harder to take seriously in an era of hate-speech rules, restrictions on exclusionary speech, and a discourse around safety that treated hostile language as violence. And so many universities found themselves accused of doing too little to criticize Hamas or to denounce and restrict pro-Palestinian speech by critics who noted that denouncing bad things and restricting hateful or unsafe speech seemed to be very much part of the institutional tool kit these days.
A truck with protest banners drives around the Harvard campus on Dec. 12, linking the debate over the Israel-Hamas war with conservative grievances about pronoun policies.JOSEPH PREZIOSO/AFP via Getty Images
These were problems of universities own making. But they coincided with problems that were very much not. What we have seen since Oct. 7 is in part the culmination of almost a decade of attacks on higher education by the ascendant populist-authoritarian wing of conservative politics. Starting in about 2015, conservative politicians, media figures and activists began a sustained campaign against perceived leftward movements at universities, particularly on race, gender and gender identity.
In the U.S., a steady drumbeat of stories in the conservative press about campus identity politics drove a dramatic divergence in public confidence in higher education. In 2015, a majority of Republicans thought higher education had a beneficial effect on American society, by a 17-point margin. Two years later, they thought the reverse, by 22 points. (Democratic views were basically stable in the same period.) Conservative advocacy groups created watchlists of left-wing professors and encouraged students to report on them or secretly record them. Formerly staid campus conservative groups radicalized and began inviting provocateurs such as Milo Yiannopoulos to speak, seeking more and more attention by provoking protests and sometimes cancellations.
At first, these critics of higher education focused on the idea that free speech and academic freedom were coming under threat: Visiting speakers were being silenced and conservative students were censoring themselves in a climate of left-wing intolerance. That emphasis has since faded away, in favour of an open willingness to suppress teaching, research and speech about race and gender that conservatives dislike. The centre of gravity has shifted from individual celebrity provocateurs to conservative governments that really do have the power to cancel.
In 2017, Hungarys authoritarian conservative government launched an eventually successful campaign to drive the privately funded and Western-oriented Central European University out of the country and to prohibit the discipline of gender studies. Starting in 2021, Republican state politicians across the United States began advocating heavy-handed interference in teaching and research about (especially) race and (to a lesser extent) gender, with many bills banning the teaching of what was inaccurately called critical race theory. The conservative activist Chris Rufo, who recently led the charge to push Harvards president out of office on plagiarism charges, was a prime culprit in mischaracterizing teaching and research about systems of racial privilege and disadvantage as critical race theory, and making its prohibition a cause clbre. He found an active ally in Floridas Republican Governor and then-future presidential candidate Ron DeSantis, who pushed through restrictions on speech, texts, teaching and research about race, gender and sexual orientation that reached from primary school to Floridas huge system of public universities. When Mr. DeSantis decided to remake Floridas elite liberal arts-oriented New College as a model of anti-wokeism, abolishing its gender-studies department and filling its student body with recruited athletes for newly established sports teams, he appointed Mr. Rufo as one of the colleges new trustees.
Protesters at New College in Sarasota, Fla., dress as Handmaid's Tale characters at a rally last February against the state government's education policies.Octavio Jones/Reuters
The moves to restrict higher education in Florida have been especially prominent, but Republican politicians and politically appointed trustees in states including Texas, North Carolina, Virginia and Louisiana, among others, have likewise shifted to direct interference in university curriculums and hiring decisions on political grounds. Up until Oct. 7, the emphasis had been overwhelmingly on gender studies and (again, wrongly called) critical race theory. The conflict in the Middle East shook up the political dynamics and expanded the conflict from public universities in Republican states to all of North American higher education. Elite liberal universities arent openly divided about the legitimacy of studying race or gender, but the Arab-Israeli conflict splits apart constituencies everywhere. Genuine intra-campus conflicts of values and misunderstandings of principle created a vulnerability that hostile off-campus actors have been happy to exploit.
The events of the past few months have driven home how little the right-wing critique of universities was ever actually about freedom of speech or academic freedom. The downfall of two university presidents partly for their failure to censor student speech and their refusal to say that more such speech should be punished just makes it undeniable. But Jewish and pro-Israel members of university communities arent necessarily guilty of the same hypocrisy. Theyve seen universities themselves shift away from the principles of academic freedom, freedom of non-academic speech, and institutional neutrality, often in the name of protecting vulnerable populations, and, in the wake of the murders of Oct. 7, asked whether Israeli Jews are somehow outside the category of the vulnerable. Many institutions of higher education have gotten in the habit of making pronouncements on political issues that tried to be substantive and anodyne at the same time; of letting some speech restrictions creep in on speech that surely everyone can agree is bad; of regulating the content of particularly vicious political messages but tolerating protests that blockade academic activities. These are generalizations that dont apply to all colleges and universities, indeed probably not most; but enough to weaken the credibility of the core principles.
The best time to have started to do the right thing was yesterday, but the second-best time is today. University leadership cant wish away the off-campus attacks, but they can recommit to academic freedom, freedom of extramural speech, and institutional neutrality, starting now. That will mean, for example, a firm defence of the right of pro-Palestinian students to protest non-disruptively; a clear stand against professors using their classrooms as political platforms; a refusal to adjudicate and police the meaning and intent of extramural political slogans or social-media posts; and the discipline to avoid adopting institutional political platforms on foreign, political or social policy. With those rules in place, they can provide the site and space for students and faculty alike to study, explore, discuss and debate, to celebrate, mourn and protest, even the most divisive questions in political life.
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Twitter Suddenly Suspends Journalists Critical of Elon Musk – Futurism
Posted: at 2:07 pm
No explanation was given. The Purge
So much for free speech.
Elon Musk's X-formerly-Twitter has suspended the accounts of several journalists and leftist pundits without giving any explanation whatsoever. As Motherboard reports, The Intercept's Ken Klippenstein, Alan MacLeod of MintPress News, Texas Observer journalist Steven Monacelli, podcaster Rob Rousseau, and the account for the left-leaning podcast TrueAnon were affected, among others.
The common thread? It seems that most or all of the affected journalists had been critical of Musk and his ventures.
"I haven't received any communications from Twitter/X about why I have been suspended," Monacelli told Motherboard in an email. "I can't think of anything I've posted lately that would be worthy of suspensions. Although I have written multiple critical reports about Twitter/X and Elon Musk."
In apost to Instagram, MacLeod wrote that "I assume the real reason is political" as he had never "even remotely been involved in any controversy/ been reported/ been stuck in Twitter jail before."
Rob Israel, who recently painted an unflattering cartoon of Musk, was also suspended.
Needless to say, the action highlights Musk's hypocritical stance on what he likes to refer to as "free speech." Especially following his acquisition of the website, he has cracked down hard on his critics.
Of course, this isn't the first time Musk has purged accounts of people who he had a personal bone to pick with. In late 2022, shortly after his chaotic takeover of the social media platform, the company suspended a significant number of journalists who'd written critically about the acquisition, including New York Timesreporter Ryan Mac,Washington Postreporter Drew Harwell, and Substack writer Aaron Rupar.
Then in April, X suspended Wired reporter Dell Cameron, who had previously interviewed an individual who had hacked the emails of conservative commentator Matt Walsh.
As to be expected at this point, neither X nor Musk have given any official statement regarding the latest suspensions.
But whether their departures will even matter is another question. The platform has lost much of its relevancy ever since Musk has taken over, making way for a flood of misinformation and hate speech. Musk himself has championed notorious disinformation accounts and spread racist conspiracy theories himself.
In short, perhaps it's best to finally say goodbye to the "flaming dumpster" in Musk's own words once and for all, a slow and excruciating demisethat arguably can't happen fast enough.
More on Twitter: Elon Musks Grok AI Accuses Him of Going to Court for Pedophilia
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Experts Warn Against Strip Mining the Moon – Futurism
Posted: at 2:07 pm
"We need to act now." Mine Not
As humans barrel ever closer to colonizing the Moon, the prospect of lunar mining is also becoming more real and the consequences just might be dire.
In interviews with The Guardian, astronomers raised alarm bells about the coming rush to mine the Moon as the NASA-funded Peregrine lander, sent out by the private spaceflight company Astrobotic, wasslated to survey the lunar surface (side note: it ran into trouble shortly after launch.)
Those experts make a straightforward point: the more development occurs on the Moon, be it for habitats or resources taken back to Earth, the less scientists can use our planet's natural satellite for study.
"We are not trying to block the building of lunar bases," University of Arizona astronomer Richard Green told the Guardian. "However, there are only a handful of promising sites there and some of these are incredibly precious scientifically."
Take, for example, the Moon's deep craters that have never seen sunlight.
"They are unbelievably cold probably only a few dozen degrees above absolute zero," Green added. "And that makes them scientifically very valuable."
Naturally, this sort of academic warning flies in the face of humankind's insatiable hunger for profit. That's why a working group headed up by Green is set to meet with the United Nations later this month to discuss the strengthening of space laws that could prohibit a potential lunar gold rush from becoming too much of a frenzy.
Despite massive advancements in spacefaring over the past few decades, there haven't been too many updates to space law since the 1967 passage of the Outer Space Treaty, which prevents any one country from laying claim to a celestial body.
In 1979, the UN introduced a Moon Treaty demanding that the Moon and other bodies "should be used exclusively for peaceful purposes, that their environments should not be disrupted." It's not a stretch to suggest that those laws are in serious need of upgrade.
On the flip side, the prospect of mining the Moon's troves of "rare Earth minerals" used to create smartphones and other consumer tech has long tantalized business types and scientists alike. Indeed, Peregrine is but the first in a series of planned public and private lunar missions slated for this year alone, all of which are intent not only on scientific advancements but also on figuring out which parts of the Moon will be best for drilling and setting up bases.
While lunar habitats may well become part of humankind's survival strategy as we become an interplanetary species, some of that tiny, barren sphere must be preserved for science if not for the sake of those who will live on it.
"We need to act now," Martin Elvis, an astrophysicist affiliated with both Harvard and the Smithsonian, told The Guardian, "because decisions made today will set the tone for our future behavior on the Moon."
More on the Moon: Chinese Spacecraft That Smashed Into Moon Was Carrying Something Mysterious, Scientists Say
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Satellites Show the East Coast Is Sinking – Futurism
Posted: at 2:07 pm
"It may be gradual, but the impacts are real." Sinking Feeling
Carefully mapped satellite imagery shows that America's East Coast particularly its major population centers is sinking at an eerily rapid pace, according to a new study conducted by researchers at Virginia Tech and the US Geological Survey.
Per the satellite study, published last week in the journal PNAS Nexus, areas including New York City, Baltimore, and Norfolk are sinking at rates between 1 and 2 millimeters annually a reality that could result in serious infrastructure damage and harm to person and property if it remains unmitigated.
"The problem is not just that the land is sinking," Leonard Ohenhen, a grad student working at Virginia Tech's Earth Observation and Innovation Lab and the lead author of the study, said in a statement. "The problem is that the hotspots of sinking land intersect directly with population and infrastructure hubs."
"We measured subsidence rates of two millimeters per year affecting more than two million people and 800,000 properties on the East Coast," added study co-author and Virginia Tech geophysics professor Manoochehr Shirzaei, who urged that subsidence the scientific term for the caving-in or sinking of land is "not an intangible threat."
"It affects you and I and everyone," the professor continued, adding that "it may be gradual, but the impacts are real."
New York's dilemma also represents some of the damage that could take place as a result of any potential oceanic engulfment. As Shirzaei noted in his statement, the study found that "significant areas of critical infrastructure in New York" that exceed annual subsidence rates of two millimeters include "JFK and LaGuardia airports and its runways, along with the railway systems." And beyond the loss of major public centers like airports and railroads, a city sinking into the ocean also presents an increased risk of dangerous and possibly deadly flooding.
If you're feeling a bit hopeless, you'd be forgiven. That said, the researchers do write in the study that more devastating consequences of East Coast subsidence could be staved off by way of proactive as opposed to reactive climate mitigation policies. But of course, in a divided America, a truly forward-thinking climate response continues to be an increasingly difficult goal.
More on climate change: Scientists Simulated Runaway Greenhouse Effect and It's Horrifying
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Millions of Plastic Pellets Wash Up on Shore – Futurism
Posted: at 2:07 pm
One container may have held 57,000 pounds of plastic pellets. Plastic Tide
In a blow to local wildlife and coastal communities, countless tiny plastic pellets are littering the waters and beaches along Spain's northern coast after containers filled with the stuff fell off a shipping boat and into the ocean near Portugal, according to the BBC.
The environmental disaster unfolded starting in December, the BBC reports, when several containers holding sacks of plastic pellets aboard the Toconaoand chartered by shipping company Maersk were lost at sea about 50 miles away from northern Portugal. It's believed that one of them contained more than 57,000 pounds of plastic pellets,whichare technically called "nurdles" and are used to make items such as plastic bottles.
Since the spill, people have been reporting a tidal wave of plastic pellets washing up on beaches in Spain's north west coast, prompting emergency clean ups and an investigation by local officials.
The BBC reports that the plastic pellets can measure in widths of less than 5 millimeters, making them technically microplastics.
Though authorities have said the pellets are non-toxic, they still poise a danger to wildlife and the environment and have potentially harmful impacts on the human body because they contain an alphabet soup of chemicals.
A study last year led by scientists at the Ocean Conservancy and the University of Toronto found that Americans will unknowingly ingest 11,500 microplasticparticles on average annually.
So, when the plastic pellets were lost at sea in early December, you can imagine it sparking a grim chain of events in which tiny plastic particles floating in the ocean end up in the belly of fish, and the fish eventually ending up on your plate.
Plastic pollution is everywhere, and that's bad.
More on plastic pollution: Scientists Find Microplastics Inside Clouds
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We’d Like to See the Chain of Custody on Elon Musk’s Pee After the Drug Allegations – Futurism
Posted: at 2:07 pm
As the fallout from reports of Elon Musk's alleged drug use continues, one columnist has made a very salient point: that there may well be someone whose job it is to collect the boss's piss.
In aBloomberg op-ed, former Goldman Sachs banker and current "Dealbreaker" editor Matt Levine recounted one of the more easily overlooked points of this bizarre plot: that Musk is, per his attorney and his own prior recollections, subjected to random drug tests. That would seem to mean that there's an employee or group of employees responsible for collecting the urine to be tested.
"Imagine," the columnist muses, "being the SpaceX employee in charge of randomly drug testing Elon Musk."
"Tiptoe into Musks office after his night out not getting into Berghain and say 'hey Mr. Musk its time for your random drug test, heres a cup,'" Levine continues. "What if he says no? What if he hands you back the cup and it is just full of cocaine? What are you going to do about it? You work for him and he is not, like, a chill and understanding guy."
Levine went on to point out that Tesla also has anti-drug policies as well, which could indicate, theoretically at least, that there's also someone who's supposed to collect urine samples from the man himself at that company as well.
Though he doesn't continue down the train of thought, the columnist's yellow-hued thought experiment would logistically entail a chain of custody for the billionaire's pee, but because we're not government piss test experts we don't know who would receive that liquid nuclear football between the sample first being expelled and it ending up in a contractor's lab somewhere.
As with many Muskian gambits, we're left with more questions than answers. Does the urine get passed off to a courier who takes it to a federal office and have it shipped to NASA headquarters in DC, or does it get sent to CalTech's Jet Propulsion Lab, which NASA co-funds, because that's closer? Would there need to beanother courier to pick it up, and who would check in the precious cargo after that?
And the glaring, number one question: how do we know it's really Musk's urine that ultimately ends up in the lab? In his famously tyranical work environments, isn't it conceivable that he's simply providing someone else's micturition, which indeed tests clean even if he has been doing drugs? It's gross, but because of Musk's immense government contracts, it's also a billion-dollar question.
Between the government and SpaceX, it's hard to tell which is the more secretive and least likely to respond to sensitive media queries of any nature, much less one regarding pee. Nevertheless, we've reached out to both to ask for "any information about how samples are taken, transported, and tested," and will definitely update this story if someone deigns to provide us with a response.
More on pee: Scientists Have Been Studying Your Pee and They Finally Have Answers
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Scientists Working to Explain "Superstructures" on Ocean Floor – Futurism
Posted: at 2:07 pm
"As we sample in more detail, we're going to find more complexity." Ocean Superstrucuture
A massive "superstructure" of igneous rock lurking below the surface of the Pacific Ocean, east of the Solomon Islands, has long puzzled scientists.
The structure, dubbed the Melanesian Border Plateau, which stretches across an area of 1,000 by 200 miles, is suspected to have been formed around 100 million years ago, and is still growing to this day.
But now, as Live Science reports, researchers may have figured out how the plateau originally formed during the Cretaceous period, a time that was marked by pulses of volcanic action that remain poorly understood.
A new paper published in the journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters suggests the plateau was the result of not just one but "four distinct episodes" of volcanism. That makes it markedly different from other major structures, which were the result of just one episode.
And the effects these episodes can have on the planet can be devastating some have even been associated with drastic climate changes, triggering mass extinction events.
But that likely wasn't the case for the Melanesian Border Plateau, where its layers of igneous rock appear to have been built up over extended periods.
"There are some features in the Pacific basin where [scientists] have only a single sample, and it looks like a very large massive single event," lead author and University of Nevada, Las Vegas geoscientist Kevin Konrad told Live Science. "Sometimes when we sample these features in detail, we realize they're actually built over multiple pulses over tens of millions of years and wouldn't have significant environmental impacts."
By studying the chemistry of rocks pulled up from around the area over the last decade, Konrad and his colleagues concluded that the plateau first formed around 120 million years ago, going through several changes as it drifted over hotspots in the Earth's mantle and forming chains of underwater islands in the process.
And many other "ocean mid-plate superstructures" may still be found as we continue to scour the world's oceans.
"As we sample in more detail," Konrad told Live Science, "we're going to find more complexity."
More on tectonic plates: Scientists Discover Molten Hell Zone Beneath Earth's Tectonic Plates
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Gaping Hole in Boeing 737 Linked to Stuffing More Passengers Into Flights – Futurism
Posted: at 2:07 pm
Last week, passengers on board an Alaska Airlines flight were rattled by a terrifying incident involving a "door plug" being ripped out of the Boeing 737 MAX 9 jet that was taking them from Portland, Oregon, to Ontario, California.
The following "violent explosive decompression event," as National Transportation Safety Board chair Jennifer Homendy later described it, forced pilots to return back to the ground though luckily, nobody got seriously injured.
As regulators pore over the data the offending door plug has since been recovered alongside a fully intact iPhone from one of the passengers new questions have arisen over the events that led to the incident.
As The American Prospect reports, the plug door, which was designed to seal a hole in the fuselage that's used in some other configurations as a door opening, was possibly the result of "cost-cutting production techniques to facilitate cramming more passengers into the cabin."
The plug door was a fix to still meet Federal Aviation Administration requirements in the case of high-capacity passenger seat layouts without having to make major changes to the fuselage design.
"There are a lot of different ways to configure an aircraft to pack in air travelers like cattle, but it changed the calculus for manufacturers to meet standards," airline industry expert Bill McGee told the Prospect.
Worse yet, court documents obtained by The Lever suggest that former employees at Boeing spinoff Spirit AeroSystems, the company Boeing subcontracted to manufacture these plug doors, told Boeing officials about an "excessive amount of defects."
Instead of heeding these warnings, internal correspondence reviewed by The Lever suggest that officials told these former employees to falsify records.
One employee told a coworker that "he believed it was just a matter of time until a major defect escaped to a customer," per the report.
As more data comes to light, the situation is starting to look grim for Boeing and the timing couldn't be worse. The company has already been through several crises over the last couple of years, following two fateful crashes in 2018 and 2019 involving 737 MAX 8 aircraft that left 346 people dead.
As for the later model, according to theNew York Times, Alaska Airlines instructed MAX 9 planes not to fly over water due to warning lights indicating a loss of cabin pressure, though it's unclear if the latest incident was related to this issue.
In August, Boeing said it had identified quality problems related to parts supplied by Spirit. However, the issue was related to the planes' aft pressure bulkheads, not plug doors.
After Boeing and Spirit jointly announced an expanded investigation, the FAA said that there was "no immediate safety concern" as a result of the defective bulkheads.
So who's at fault following the latest incident? Was it Boeing, which subcontracted out the plug door, or did regulators fail to enforce rules that could've stopped the latest incident from happening in the first place? Or perhaps a mix of both?
The investigation has only begun, and we're only starting to get a clearer picture of the outrageous accident.
More on the incident: Schoolteacher Finds Door Plug That Fell Off Boeing 737 in His Backyard
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Rejoice! Device That Sprays Your Butthole Now Connects to Alexa for Voice Control – Futurism
Posted: at 2:07 pm
Alexa, clean my butt. Smart Throne
Kohler, a name that's practically synonymous with chic, premium plumbing, has long been on top of the smart toilet game.
Now, it's bringing its tech toilet offerings to the masses, announcing a new voice-controlled bidet seat called the PureWash E930 that you can install on your peasant porcelain throne to wash your ass on uttered or grunted royal command.
At $2,149, the PureWash E930 is far cheaper than getting a full blown toilet from Kohler's smart offerings. At that still exorbitant price point and here's the kicker your bidet comes with Amazon Alexa and Google Home compatibility built-in, according to The Verge. So, yes: you'll have to connect your fancy toilet hardware to devices known to be privacy nightmares to get the most out its lavatorial luxury.
But if you're willing to pay that price, Kohler lets you use the bidet's many featuresto get your business out of the way without so much as lifting a finger.
And let it be said that the bidet's spray is ridiculously fine-tuneable. It comes with oscillating and pulsating spray modes. The water pressure is adjustable, and so is the temperature. A gentler child mode is included, too. And for "consistent comfort," Kohler says the water is continuously heated, per The Verge. Rest assured that when nature calls, your E930 won't leave you cold.
The luxuries don't end there. The bidet thoughtfully pre-mists the toilet bowl for more effective flushing. It automatically opens and closes. It also has a self-cleaning mode using UV light, and a warm air dryer to keep your buns toasty as they're dried off. Built in LEDs can be used as a nightlight. All of these little features can be linked to Kohler's app to let you save and toggle your preferences at a click.
If getting your smartphone involved is too much tech for you and having to utter the steps of your sacred toilet routine aloud is a no-no Kohler's product also comes with a remote control.
And hey, if this is the kind of stuff you want to blow your hard-earned dough on, go for it. But be apprised that smart gadgetsencroaching on theprivacy of the bathroom has resulted in shocking violations of trust in the past.
More on tech: Amazon Caught Selling Bathroom Spy Cam Disguised as Clothes Hook
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