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Category Archives: Transhuman News
Former Jacksonville Jaguar, wife help discover medical breakthrough – ActionNewsJax.com
Posted: May 23, 2017 at 10:23 pm
by: Action News Jax Updated: May 22, 2017 - 8:04 PM
Action News Jax has learned about a revolutionary medical breakthrough that wouldn't have been possible without the help of a former Jacksonville Jaguar and his wife.
A new gene-replacement therapy treatment could unlock the means to cure a devastating type of muscular dystrophy. It's already saved the lives of dogs and is just months away from being tested in children.
Video shows dogs that were destined to die, showing no signs of the disease after a single infusion of gene-replacement therapy. The disease is so deadly in children, 50 percent of them die before their second birthday.
"This is a huge deal. This is probably the most important thing we'll ever work on," said Dr. Casey Childers of the University of Washington Medicine.
For the past eight years, Childers has been focused on finding a cure for a form of muscular dystrophy called myotubularmyopathy or MTM. It is a rare disease that affects the skeletal muscles.
"Patients are unable to walk. They're unable to speak, unable to swallow and unable to breathe without assistance. It's a childhood disease. It affects baby boys and it's universally fatal. So it's a bad, bad disease, said Childers.
Myotubularmyopathy affects dogs, too. In U.W. Medicine video, never seen by the public until now, gene-replacement therapy has resulted in a remarkable transformation in dogs and a possible cure for MTM.
The search for a cure began with the search for a dog by a Ponte Vedra Beach family. The son of Alison and Paul Frase was born with myotubularmyopathy. Joshua Frase was born on Feb. 2, 1995 with a devastating prognosis.
"My doctor came to me and she said, Alison, I really believe Joshua has a severe disorder and he's not gonna make it through the day.
Joshua continued to defy the odds, but only had the strength to move his right hand.
"Joshua cognitively was a normal little boy. He was just locked in a body," said Paul Frase.
At the time, Paul Frase was with the New York Jets. Within two weeks, his life would be thrown into even more turmoil. He was picked in NFL Expansion Draft.
"All of sudden Im the ninth pick of the Jacksonville Jaguars," Paul says.
His new team was more than 900-miles away.
"It was a decision that Allison and I made that I would continue to play football because we needed the benefits, the health care, we needed the money."
While his NFL career continued, the real battle was off the field, fighting the clock to try to find a cure. With 50 percent of children with MTM dying before their second birthday, Alison was determined to find a cure for her son Joshua. Alison was told by their geneticist at Boston Childrens Hospital that if she could find a dog with MTM, doctors could try gene-replacement therapy that could possibly lead to a treatment for her son.
"That's when her wheels started spinning and she said, we've got to figure something out," said Paul Frase.
Alison scoured the country looking for a dog with MTM and struck gold north of the border.
"We got a call back from a cowboy in the middle of Canada and he quickly said, I want to give you my dog. I want to help your son, said Alison.
The dog, named Nibs, delivered a litter of puppies and from there, a colony of dogs with the deadly form of muscular dystrophy was born.
Very rapidly over a few weeks, certainly by four months of age, the affected puppies are unable to walk. They're very, very weak and unfortunately, they require humane euthanasia, said Childers.
In an effort to save the lives of the dogs, and ultimately the lives of children, researchers at U.W. Medicine infused a replacement gene into puppies that have MTM.
In video obtained by Action News Jax, two puppies from the same litter showed a dramatic difference. One was given saline and the other was given a single treatment of gene replacement therapy. The puppy receiving the therapy quickly showed no signs of the disease.
Unbelievably fast. So, we see effects with two to three weeks, maximal within about six weeks. Weve now observed dogs for more than 4- years after infusion and they appear perfectly normal and healthy.
The two dogs have lived more than four years after receiving gene-replacement therapy. The dogs are remarkably active.
"These dogs would normally die around 2 months of age, 2 to 4 months of age. Because of the gene therapy, they've survived now to over four years," said researcher Dr. David Mack.
Doctors are cautious in their optimism but say its the most profound thing they have witnessed during their decades in medicine.
"I don't like to use the word miracle, but it's pretty darn close," said Childers.
Within months, clinical trials will begin around the world and children with the deadly disease will receive the same gene-replacement therapy as the dogs. Childers believes the chances are very, very good that the therapy will work in children. He is also painfully aware that the clock is ticking for children and their families praying for a miracle.
Joshua Frase lost his battle with MTM 41 days before his 16th birthday. His room remains the same with his glasses, cars and planes on bookshelves.
"It definitely brings back a lot of, just little poignant memories that put a smile on your face.
"He was a clown. He was a funny, intelligent, smart, normal kid. He was not just a son. He was a friend, said Paul Frase.
Frase played in the NFL and twice received the teams Courage Award. Frase said the courage came from his son.
"Joshua taught us about courage. He taught us about love. You learn a lot from these kids with these disabilities."
The grave marker for Joshua Frase includes a Bible verse, They shall run and not be weary, they shall walk and not faint.
It is a reminder of the debilitating disease that took his life. Childers said Joshuas legacy lives on through the dogs, doctors and his familys determination to find a cure.
"This is his legacy. No question about it. If it weren't for his parents, we wouldn't be having this conversation," said Childers. "If it weren't for just unrelenting, you know, just can do attitude, never take no for an answer, never quit on the part of his parents, yeah, this is absolutely his legacy. There's nothing that comes anywhere close to this. If this is the last thing I ever do in my research career, I'll die a happy man."
It is estimated that one in 50,000 children have myotubularmyopathy. Alison and Paul Frase started the Joshua Frase Foundation and believe there are, at least, 5,000 to 6,000 children with MTM.
Eighty percent of rare diseases are caused by a genetic defect. Doctors hope that gene-replacement therapy will, one day, lead to cures for other genetic diseases
2017 Cox Media Group.
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Former Jacksonville Jaguar, wife help discover medical breakthrough - ActionNewsJax.com
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Medical care delayed for Las Vegas valley veteran with deadly lung cancer – KTNV Las Vegas
Posted: at 10:23 pm
LAS VEGAS (KTNV) - Delays in diagnosis and patient care at the VA Southern Nevada are once again making headlines.
Contact 13 has a new report about multiple failures in the case of a local veteran.
Suffering from a condition where every day counts, the veteran had to wait six months for a proper evaluation.
The delay caused a domino effect in the diagnosis and treatment of the disease that ended his life.
In need of urgent surgery, the veteran fell victim to bureaucracy.
This newly released report from the VA Inspector General says the veteran also wasn't notified of test results in a timely fashion -- partly due to failed follow-up on a non-VA doctor's recommendation for a lung biopsy.
There were delays in getting authorization for non-VA medical care, difficulty getting chemotherapy medications and delayed treatment of what turned out to be lung cancer -- which kills more Americans than any other form.
It all happened in 2014 -- a scandal-plagued year for the VA when some 40 veterans in Phoenix died while on waiting lists for medical care.
Here in Las Vegas, Contact 13 exposed long wait times and canceled appointments compromising care for Southern Nevada veterans.
And that same year, we reported an eerily similar case to the one detailed in the OIG's report -- the story of Gene Broadwell, a Coast Guard veteran who died of lung cancer.
"This man who'd never been sick in his life was treated like some piece of garbage thrown out by the VA," said Broadwell's widow, Delores.
The last year of Gene Broadwell's life was peppered with appointment delays his wife believes were a death sentence.
"They could have found it maybe earlier and did the chemo and the radiation. He'd still be sitting here talking to us."
The VA acknowledged they could have done better to serve the man who served his country.
"Is it fair to say you don't want to see another Broadwell case?" Darcy Spears asked then-VA Chief of Medicine Dr. Milan Parekh
"Absolutely," Dr. Parekh answered. "I think that's a very fair statement."
But two years later, as the new report details, it happened again.
The VA says the deficiencies identified in the report have been resolved, partly due to nationally-mandated changes to the VA's Choice program, which allows veterans to receive care from non-VA doctors.
There are about 240,000 veterans living in the Las Vegas area.
VASNHS OFFICIAL RESPONSE
Since the 2014 timeframe in which this incident occurred, the Veterans Health Administration and VA Southern Nevada Healthcare System have implemented numerous changes and resolved all the deficiencies identified in the report to the OIGs satisfaction. Highlights include:
- Establishment of a better process for communicating test results to patients within 14 days (Current internal record reviews show 100 percent compliance).
- Implementation of the Veterans Choice Program nationwide in 2015 to streamline processes to provide authorizations for care in the community, track results and follow-up on outside provider recommendations (No reported significant delays in care that impacted outcomes of care).
- Processing more than 95 percent of STAT consults (a consult that clinical care is required within 24-48 hours) on time and processing a majority of all other consults within seven days.
- Improved education and procedures for sending patients seen in the Emergency Department to community facilities and intensive case management of their outside care.
- Realignment of Non VA Care and Choice program and expansion of staff to manage consults actions and decisions.
- Investigation and resolution of medication management issues and barriers. Currently, VASNHS completes 97.7 percent of non-formulary consults within 96 hours.
We are confident these actions along with expanded emergency care and access to same-day services at all primary care facilities for Veterans with urgent needs will prevent the recurrence of a similar issue in the future.
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Medical care delayed for Las Vegas valley veteran with deadly lung cancer - KTNV Las Vegas
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Using a genetic signature to overcome chemotherapy-resistant lung cancer – Medical Xpress
Posted: at 10:23 pm
May 23, 2017 Drs. Elisabeth D. Martinez, Dr. John Minna, and Dr. Maithili Dalvi. Credit: UT Southwestern
Patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) often respond to standard chemotherapy, only to develop drug resistance later, and with fatal consequences. But what if doctors could identify those at greatest risk of relapse and provide a therapy to overcome or avoid it?
Researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center believe they have an answer: a 35-gene signature that identifies tumor cells most likely to develop resistance to treatment. The study, published today in Cell Reports, points to a new pharmacologic approach to target chemo-resistant lung cancer and even prevent development of such resistance in the first place.
"Cancer relapse after chemotherapy poses a major obstacle to treating lung cancer, and resistance to chemotherapy is a big cause of that treatment failure," said study co-author Dr. John Minna, a Professor and Director of in the Hamon Center for Therapeutic Oncology Research at UT Southwestern. "These findings provide new insights into why resistance develops and how to overcome it."
Dr. Minna, with additional appointments in Pharmacology and Internal Medicine, also holds the Sarah M. and Charles E. Seay Distinguished Chair in Cancer Research and the Max L. Thomas Distinguished Chair in Molecular Pulmonary Oncology.
Investigators studied mouse and cellular models of NSCLC, a type of lung cancer that the American Cancer Society estimates accounts for 85 percent of all lung cancer cases in the United States.
"Previous studies have shown that up to 70 percent of those cancers develop resistance to standard therapy, such as the platinum-taxane two-drug combo that is often given," said study senior author Dr. Elisabeth D. Martinez, Assistant Professor of Pharmacology and in the Hamon Center. Both she and Dr. Minna are also members of UTSW's Harold C. Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Using long-term on/off drug cycles, lead author and former postdoctoral researcher Dr. Maithili Dalvi developed a series of cellular models of progressive tumor resistance to standard chemotherapy that ranged from very sensitive to highly insensitive. Next, the researchers identified genes commonly altered during the development of resistance across multiple cell line and mouse models and identified a 35-gene signature that indicated a higher genetic likelihood of chemotherapy resistance.
"It's like a fingerprint for resistance," Dr. Martinez said, adding that it was predictive in both cells and mouse models.
Next they compared this resistance biomarker using genetic profiles from human tumors in their National Cancer Institute (NCI) lung cancer Specialized Programs of Research Excellence (SPORE) database at UT MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. The database contained information on patient outcomes and those who had been treated with the two-drug chemotherapy. The genetic fingerprint for resistance correlated with cancer relapse in NSCLC patients in the database, she said.
Researchers discovered that as cancer cells developed greater resistance to chemotherapy, they progressively made higher amounts of enzymes called JumonjiC lysine demethylases. Dr. Martinez said these enzymes facilitate resistance by changing the expression of - or turning on and off - genes.
"Cancer cells use these enzymes to change, or reprogram, gene expression in order to survive the toxic stress of the chemotherapy. By changing the expression of genes, the tumor cells can adapt and survive the toxins," she said.
Investigators then tested two potential drugs, both JumonjiC inhibitors. One of them, JIB-04, was found by UT Southwestern researchers in the Martinez lab during a small-molecule screen conducted at the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences' Chemical Genomics Center in Bethesda, Maryland.
"I believe this is the first report of NSCLC tumors taking advantage of multiple JumonjiC enzymes to reprogram gene expression in order to survive chemotoxic stress. In addition, and this is the most fascinating part: Dr. Dalvi found that greater chemotherapy resistance defines a new susceptibility to the JumonjiC inhibitors," she said. "The cancer cells develop a new Achilles' heel that we can hit."
Because the chemo-resistant cancer cells are dependent on JumonjiC enzymes for survival, inhibiting those enzymes returns cancer cells to mortality and vulnerability to cell death, she explained.
"We think these JumonjiC inhibitors have the potential to be used either to treat tumors once they become resistant to standard therapies, or to prevent resistance altogether," she said. "In our experiments these inhibitors appear to be much more potent in killing cancer cells than normal cells."
Later, researchers tested whether the Jumonji inhibitors JIB-04 or GSK-J4 prevented chemotherapy resistance. This strategy succeeded in cell cultures and partially prevented resistance in animal models, Dr. Martinez said.
Explore further: Team discovers opportunities to overcome cancer treatment resistance
A collaborative Cleveland Clinic, University of Oxford and Moffitt Cancer Center team of researchers has proven the theory that, while resistance to targeted treatment in cancer is truly a moving target, there are opportunities ...
Researchers from the transformation and metastasis group of the Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute (IDIBELL), led by Dr. Eva Gonzlez-Surez, have recreated and characterized the development of resistance to chemotherapy ...
Working with human breast cancer cells and mice, researchers at Johns Hopkins say they have identified a biochemical pathway that triggers the regrowth of breast cancer stem cells after chemotherapy.
A new study by researchers at The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center - Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute (OSUCCC - James) has identified a mechanism by which cancer cells ...
Mayo Clinic scientists have identified a specific protein implicated in drug resistance, as well as a possible therapeutic tool. Their work appears in the EMBO Journal.
A pioneering University of Liverpool research team have published a study that identifies the mechanism in the human body that causes resistance of pancreatic cancer cells to chemotherapy.
Scientists have found that carrying fat around your middle could be as good an indicator of cancer risk as body mass index (BMI), according to research published in the British Journal of Cancer today.
Patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) often respond to standard chemotherapy, only to develop drug resistance later, and with fatal consequences. But what if doctors could identify those at greatest risk of relapse ...
Most women diagnosed with ovarian cancer undergo surgery to remove as many of the tumors as possible. However, it is usually impossible to eliminate all of the cancer cells because they have spread throughout the abdomen. ...
A study led by the University of Birmingham has made a breakthrough in the understanding of how different genetic mutations cause acute myeloid leukaemia.
Drinking just one glass of wine or other alcoholic drink a day increases breast cancer risk, finds a major new report by the American Institute for Cancer Research (AICR) and the World Cancer Research Fund (WCRF).
New research from the Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California (USC) shows new promise in the fight against one of the most lethal forms of cancer. Studies in mice with a mutation present in 90 percent ...
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New resistance gene found in Salmonella isolated from chickens – CIDRAP
Posted: at 10:23 pm
A team of Canadian scientists has identified a gene that confers resistance to the broad-spectrum antibiotic fosfomycin, according to a study yesterday in Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy.
The gene, dubbed fosA7, was found in 15 Salmonella enterica isolates from broiler chickens in British Columbia. The isolates were of the Salmonella Heidelberg serotype, which is commonly identified in poultry and has become one of the leading causes of salmonellosis in humans. In recent years, Heidelberg strains have become more resistant to antibiotics, limiting therapeutic options. The gene was also found in three other Salmonella serotypesAgona, Montevideo, and Tennessee.
Although polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing showed that the gene was exclusively located on the chromosome of the Salmonella Heidelberg isolates, the concern is that fosA7 could potentially be spread to other strains of Salmonella and other families of bacteria if transferred to plasmidssmall, floating pieces of DNA that can be shared among bacteria through a process known as horizontal gene transfer.
"If it's on the chromosome, and it jumps to the plasmid, and the plasmid gets into another [type of bacteria], then the situation becomes worse," corresponding author Moussa Diarra, PhD, a research scientist with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, told CIDRAP News.
Increased use of fosfomycin in human and veterinary medicine would then increase the prevalence of the gene.
To see whether fosA7 could be transferrable, the scientists made a clone of the gene and copied it onto a plasmid inserted into a sample of the Salmonella serotype Enteritidis. Antibiotic susceptibility tests on the modified Enteritidis strains showed that a more than 256-fold increase in the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of fosfomycin was needed to prevent growth of the bacteria.
"These results further suggest the fosA7 is responsible for fosfomycin resistance and if transferred on plasmids, it can induce a high level of resistance in the recipient bacterial strain," the authors write.
Fosfomycin is an older, well-tolerated antibiotic with activity against both gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria. It has been used to treat a variety of human infections, including urinary tract infections, and is considered a safe alternative for treating infections caused by multidrug-resistant bacteria, including those caused by Salmonella. The existence of a gene that could lead to the failure of fosfomycin would be highly problematic.
"It's an important antibiotic," Diarra said. "If we have resistance to it, too, then [treatment] becomes complicated."
As a result, Diarra and his colleagues call for "vigilant monitoring" for the spread of fosfomycin resistance in bacteria isolated from humans and animals.
Nontyphoidal Salmonella causes an estimated 1.2 million foodborne illnesses and about 450 deaths each year in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention). The agency's most recent estimate of antibiotic-resistant Salmonella infections put the burden at 6,200 cases annually.
See also:
May 22 Antimicrob Agents Chemother study abstract
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Clint Eastwood Warns Political Correctness ‘Killing’ Country: ‘We’ve Lost Our Sense of Humor’ – Breitbart News
Posted: at 10:23 pm
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While addressing a packed audience Sunday, the Oscar-winner said his seminal crime dramaDirty Harrycould not have been made in todays politically correct climate.
A lot of people thought it was politically incorrect, Eastwood said of the 1971 film he starred in. That was at the beginning of the era that were in now, where everybody thinks everyones politically correct.
Were killing ourselves by doing that, the 86-year-old star warned, declaring that weve lost our sense of humour.
Of course, this wasnt the first time that Eastwood has warned of the dangers of political correctness.
In an interview last August withEsquire,Eastwood said then-candidate Donald Trumps political success was due in part to his disregard for political correctness.
Hes onto something, because secretly everybodys getting tired of political correctness, kissing up, the actor said,Thats the kiss-ass generation were in right now. Were really in a pussy generation. Everybodys walking on eggshells.
Hes said a lot of dumb things. So have all of them. Both sides, he added. But everybody the press and everybodys going, Oh, well, thats racist, and theyre making a big hoodoo out of it. Just f*cking get over it. Its a sad time in history.
While the filmmakertold festival-goers that he would return to acting someday, hedid impart some filming wisdom on a crowd that featuredA-listers and entertainment industry executives.
If you have good luck with your instincts, you might as well trust them, he said. Its an emotional art form. Its not an intellectual art form at all.
Eastwood was honored with several screenings of his filmsover the weekend.
The filmmaker recentlysigned on to directThe 15:17 to Paris,a film based on the thwarted ISIS-inspired terror attack in 2015 in which a gunman opened fire on ahigh-speed train traveling to Paris.
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Facebook Needs to Be More Transparent About Why It Censors Speech – Fortune
Posted: at 10:22 pm
Photograph by Chris Ratcliffe Bloomberg/Getty Images
The more Facebook tries to move beyond its original role as a social network for sharing family photos and other ephemera, the more it finds itself in an ethical minefield, torn between its desire to improve the world and its need to curb certain kinds of speech.
The tension between these two forces has never been more obvious than it is now, thanks to two recent examples of when its impulses can go wrong, and the potential damage that can be caused as a result. The first involves a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist whose account was restricted, and the second relates to Facebook's leaked moderation guidelines.
In the first case, investigative reporter Matthew Caruana Galizia had his Facebook account suspended recently after he posted documents related to a story about a politician in Malta.
Caruana Galizia was part of a team that worked with the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists to break the story of the Panama Papers, a massive dump of documents that were leaked from an offshore law firm last year.
The politician, Maltese prime minister Joseph Muscat, was implicated in a scandal as a result of those leaked documents, which referred to shell companies set up by him and two other senior politicians in his administration.
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Facebook not only suspended Caruana Galizia's account, it also removed a number of the documents that he had posted related to the story. It later restored his access to his account after The Guardian and a Maltese news outlet wrote about it, but some of the documents never reappeared.
The social network has rules that are designed to prevent people from posting personal information about other users, but it's not clear whether that's why the account was suspended.
Some of what Caruana Galizia posted contained screenshots of passports and other personal data, but many of these documents have remained available, while others have been removed. He is being sued by Muscat for libel, which has raised concerns about whether Facebook suspended the account because of pressure from officials in Malta.
A spokesman for Facebook told the Guardian that it was working with the reporter "so that he can publish what he needs to, without including unnecessary private details that could present safety risks. If we find that we have made errors, we will correct them."
Caruana Galizia said the incident was enlightening "because I realized how crippling and punitive this block is for a journalist." And they clearly reinforce the risks that journalists and media entities take when they decide to use the social network as a distribution outlet.
If nothing else, these and other similar incidents make it obvious that Facebook needs to do far more when it comes to being transparent about when and why it removes content, especially when that content is of a journalistic nature.
In an unrelated incident, the world got a glimpse into how the social network makes some of its content decisions thanks to a leaked collection of guidelines and manuals for the 4,500 or so moderators it employs, which was posted by the Guardian .
Outlined in the documents are rules about what kinds of statements are considered too offensive to allow, how much violence the site allows in videos including Facebook Live, which has been the subject of significant controversy recentlyand what to do with sexually suggestive imagery.
Much like Twitter, Facebook appears to be trying to find a line between getting rid of offensive behavior while still leaving room for freedom of expression.
In the process, however, it has raised questions about why the giant social network makes some of the choices it does. Statements within the guidelines about violence towards women, for examplesuch as "To snap a bitchs neck, make sure to apply all your pressure to the middle of her throat"are considered okay because they are not specific threats.
Facebook has already come under fire for some of its decisions around what to show on its live-streaming feature. There have been several cases in which people committed suicide and streamed it on Facebook Live, and in at least one case a man killed his child and then himself .
The guidelines say that while videos of violence and even death should be marked as disturbing, in many cases they do not have to be deleted because they can "help create awareness of issues such as mental illness," and because Facebook doesn't want to "censor or punish people in distress."
As a private corporation, Facebook is entitled to make whatever rules it wants about the type of speech that is permitted on its platform because the First Amendment only applies to the actions of governments. But when a single company plays such a huge role in the online behavior of more than a billion people, it's worth asking questions about the impact its rules have.
If Facebook censors certain kinds of speech, then for tens of millions of people it effectively ceases to exist, or becomes significantly less obvious.
The risks of this kind of private control over speech are obvious when it comes to things like filter bubbles or the role that "fake news" plays in political movements. But there's a deeper risk as well, which is that thanks to the inscrutability of Facebook's algorithm, many people won't know what they are missing when information is removed.
Facebook may not want to admit that it is a media entity, but the reality is that it plays a huge role in how billions of people see the world around them. And part of the responsibility that comes with that kind of role is being more transparent about why and how you make decisions about what information people shouldn't be able to see.
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The European Union Wants to Censor Hate Speech on Social Media – Reason (blog)
Posted: at 10:22 pm
Alberto Pezzali/NurPhoto/Sipa US/NewscomIn America, civil libertarians frequently have to remind citizens that there's no "hate speech" exemption to the First Amendment. But our First Amendment doesn't fly in Europe, and now the European Union (EU) may be about to mandate censorship rules for social media.
EU ministers today approved a plan that will require social media platforms and online video hosts to block and remove videos that contain "hate speech, incitement to hatred and content justifying terrorism from their platforms," according to Reuters. For now at least, this just covers videos, not text, images, or livestreaming.
It's not entirely clear whether Facebook or YouTube will have to censor videos posted by platform users in the United States to remain in compliance with the law. We do know that EU countries like Germany are just itching to levy huge finestens of millions of euroson social media companies that haven't been quick to suppress hate speech. That kind of pressure would certainly encourage a very broad censorship regime on the part of the companies.
The new rule has been in the works for a whilepart of the Audiovisual Media Services Directive, a set of commercial media regulations. In addition to ordering the censorship of content, the EU wants to dabble in cultural protectionism: The proposal approved today mandates that 30 percent of the content of streaming services such as Netflix and Amazon Prime be from member countries. The recommendation was originally 20 percent, but EU ministers jacked it up.
This will be the EU's first attempt to adopt this sort of platform censorship. If the European Parliament approves the regulations, don't be surprised to see more.
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The European Union Wants to Censor Hate Speech on Social Media - Reason (blog)
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To censor or sanction extreme content? Either way, Facebook can’t win – The Guardian
Posted: at 10:22 pm
The documents detail what is and is not permitted on the platform, covering graphic violence, bullying, hate speech, sexual content, terrorism and self-harm. Photograph: Shailesh Andrade/Reuters
Facebook allows people to live-stream their suicide attempts as long as they are engaging with viewers but will remove footage once theres no longer an opportunity to help the person. Pledges to kill oneself through hashtags or emoticons or those that specify a fixed date more than five days in the future shouldnt be treated as a high priority.
These are tiny snippets from a cache of training materials that Facebook content moderators need to absorb, in just two weeks, before policing the worlds largest social network.
The guidelines also require moderators to learn the names and faces of more than 600 terrorist leaders, decide when a beheading video is newsworthy or celebratory, and allow Holocaust denial in all but four of the 16 countries where its illegal those where Facebook risks being sued or blocked for flouting local law.
The documents detail what is and is not permitted on the platform, covering graphic violence, bullying, hate speech, sexual content, terrorism and self-harm. For the first time the public has a glimpse of the thought process behind some of the companys editorial judgements that go beyond the vague wording of its community standards or statements made in the wake of a live-streamed murder.
This might be the most important editorial guide sheet the world has ever created. Its surprising its not even longer, said Carl Miller, research director at the Centre for the Analysis of Social Media at London-based thinktank Demos. Its come out of a mangle of thousands of different conversations, pressures and calls for change that Facebook gets from governments around the world.
It is clear that Facebook has an unprecedented challenge on its hands. The platform has inadvertently become the worlds largest media organization, with nearly 2bn readers and contributors encompassing the full spectrum of humanitys capacity to entertain, sadden, bore, horrify and disgust.
In order to provide simple instructions to moderators, the documents highlight specific visceral examples. And its not pretty.
Footage of animal abuse is allowed but must be marked as disturbing if there is, among other things, dismemberment or visible innards. Images of physical child abuse is acceptable unless shared with sadism and celebration. Comments such as Irish are stupid are removed while moderators are told to ignore Blonde women are stupid. A picture of a child who appears to have Down syndrome captioned I can count to potato does not have to be deleted.
The files explain that people use violent language to express frustration online without stopping to think about the consequences. This is because they feel indifferent towards their target because of the lack of empathy created by communications via devices as opposed to face to face a neat description of the so-called online disinhibition effect.
This appears to contradict much of Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerbergs 5,700-word manifesto, published in February, that placed heavy emphasis on the social network fostering human connections. It is jarring to see so many examples of human cruelty and depravity laid bare, but they raise important questions over whether Facebooks users are comfortable with the lines the company has drawn.
Either way, Facebook cannot win.
On one hand, it is expected to clamp down on terrorist recruitment, glorified violence and live-streamed crime, while on the other it is accused of overzealous censorship and collaboration with oppressive regimes. This is a terrible bind, Miller said. They found themselves with all these responsibilities and power they never anticipated getting and would rather do without.
Private companies are doing what weve only really expected constituted officials of sovereign power to do.
Part of the challenge for Facebook is ensuring its rules are applied correctly across the world, taking into account linguistic and cultural nuance. They want to create a systematic check box exercise in order to universalize the operation, but thats not the way human language works, said Miller, who studies how terror networks use social media.
One solution being explored by Facebook is a global voting system to allow users to set their own levels of comfort with content, an idea floated by Zuckerberg in his manifesto.
Where is your line on nudity? On violence? On graphic content? On profanity? What you decide will be your personal settings, he wrote.
Although we will still block content based on standards and local laws, our hope is that this system of personal controls and democratic referenda should minimize restrictions on what we can share.
Moderators also need to take into account local laws, but not in every case.
We respect, but do not welcome, local law that stands as an obstacle to an open and connected world, said Facebook in the training documents. Given this we will not censor content unless a nation has demonstrated the political will to enforce its censorship laws.
Facebook has restricted content in Pakistan, Russia and Turkey in the past and has reportedly developed software to accommodate Chinas censorship demands.
The cherished principles of free speech on which the internet was founded go out the window when they dont align with business interests.
The companys commitment to these things appears to wax and wane depending on public sentiment
So many of these policies are at odds with each other, said Sarah T Roberts, a UCLA professor who studies large-scale moderation of online platforms. The companys commitment to these things appears to wax and wane depending on public sentiment.
Its no wonder the company errs so regularly, whether thats censoring Napalm Girl or live-streaming the murder of a grandfather in Cleveland. In response to the mounting slip-ups, CEO Mark Zuckerberg pledged to add 3,000 more content reviewers to its community operations team.
Facebooks moderators, known as community operations analysts, are typically low-paid contractors. The Guardian found job listings offering an annual salary of between $23,000 (in Dublin) and $40,000 (at Facebooks headquarters in California), although many others will earn less in places such as the Philippines. The 4,500-strong community operations team reviews more than 100m pieces of content every month, which leaves around 10 seconds to make a judgement call about each one.
Facebook told the Guardian that it recognizes the work can often be difficult and offers every person reviewing content psychological support and wellness resources.
In order to make moderation more efficient, Facebook is developing artificial intelligence to identify offending content. It also uses algorithms to spot suicidal users and is exploring ways to use AI to distinguish between news stories about terrorism and actual terrorist propaganda.
As much as Facebook might want to replace human moderators with automated systems, doing so will not be easy.
Its impossible for algorithms alone to manage human experience, said Peter Friedman, CEO of LiveWorld, which provides moderation services to big brands.
This is highly complex work, Roberts said, and requires a mastery of many topics, current events, other cultures and languages, so its interesting that its so devalued.
Miller agrees: However clever Facebook is, so much of this is impressionistic and contextual and difficult to interpret.
He said he frequently struggles to judge suspected terrorist content because he doesnt understand the tropes, language or internal slang. The idea that anyone can learn that in addition to all the other bodies of content they need to make judgements about in two weeks is very surprising to me.
It must be one of the worst jobs on the internet, he said.
In the UK, the Samaritans can be contacted on 116 123. In the US, the National Suicide Prevention Hotline is 1-800-273-8255. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is on 13 11 14.
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To censor or sanction extreme content? Either way, Facebook can't win - The Guardian
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Ducey Vetoes Bill Aimed At Protecting High School Journalists From Censorship – KJZZ
Posted: at 10:22 pm
KJZZ | Ducey Vetoes Bill Aimed At Protecting High School Journalists From Censorship KJZZ The legislation was meant to allow students more freedom in reporting, and stop school administrators from censoring stories from publication. Advocates of the bill say it would have allowed students to write about more hot-button issues and give a ... |
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Ducey Vetoes Bill Aimed At Protecting High School Journalists From Censorship - KJZZ
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Cutting Calories Could Drastically Reduce Your Body’s Internal Aging – Men’s Health
Posted: at 10:19 pm
Men's Health | Cutting Calories Could Drastically Reduce Your Body's Internal Aging Men's Health This most recent find on the search for immortality comes from a review from a set of researchers at Duke University, and was also published in Journals of Gerontology, Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences. The researchers came to the ... |
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Cutting Calories Could Drastically Reduce Your Body's Internal Aging - Men's Health
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