sea "Espero que el Liverpool sea campeón con Luis Diaz": Rafael Santos Borré By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Tue, 24 May 2022 16:52:00 +0000 Rafael Santos Borré, futbolista colombiano, habló en 10AM Hoy Por Hoy sobre lo que viene para su futuro. Full Article
sea “Queremos que los barranquilleros seamos orgullosos de nuestro mito”: Juan José Jaramillo, director de CLENA By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Thu, 30 Mar 2023 17:22:00 +0000 Full Article
sea “Se requiere que sea universal el seguro del SOAT”: Jaime Urrego, viceministro de Salud By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Dec 2023 16:21:00 +0000 En 10AM Hoy por Hoy de Caracol Radio, estuvo Jaime Urrego, viceministro de Salud, para hablar las dificultades de los accidentes de tránsito en el país, bajo el marco del Foro de seguridad vial de la Contraloría General. Full Article
sea Me he enfocado en que el relato histórico no sea solo de hombres: Santiago Posteguillo By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Tue, 30 Apr 2024 18:49:00 +0000 En Caracol Radio estuvo el escritor y lingüista español Santiago Posteguillo. Full Article
sea Hay buena relación entre Colombia y EE. UU., más allá de quién sea el presidente: embajador By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 16:29:00 +0000 Daniel García-Peña en 10AM Full Article
sea Brandon Seabrook: Object of Unknown Function By www.allaboutjazz.com Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 06:57:00 +0000 Brandon Seabrook's Object of Unknown Function feels like a sonic experiment gone rogue. In this album, Seabrook seems motivated by a desire to explore the liminal spaces between structured chaos and unstructured order, leaving listeners caught in the crosshairs... [ read more ] Full Article
sea Una ballena llevó a pasear a un kayakista en Argentina en su lomo By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Sat, 11 Sep 2021 20:55:00 +0000 Full Article
sea Gabriela Domínguez, la mujer detrás del Festival de Cine Seaflower By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Sun, 31 Oct 2021 21:53:44 +0000 Full Article
sea Festival de cine inclusivo para que el séptimo arte sea más accesible By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Sun, 16 Oct 2022 16:19:00 +0000 Full Article
sea Pedroza: "Logramos el primer título, pero esperamos que sean dos este año" By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Fri, 22 Oct 2021 13:43:59 +0000 Full Article
sea Julio César Uribe: "No creo que Colombia sea la favorita ante Perú" By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Wed, 26 Jan 2022 12:12:44 +0000 Full Article
sea Agustín Julio: "Entregaré el equipo en mayo cuando seamos campeones" By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Thu, 28 Apr 2022 15:59:10 +0000 Full Article
sea De La Rosa: “Tenemos un gran equipo para pelear el título al equipo que sea” By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Sat, 14 May 2022 13:23:10 +0000 Full Article
sea Camacho sobre Gamero: "Queremos que su dimensión sea a largo plazo" By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Fri, 05 Aug 2022 15:35:00 +0000 Full Article
sea Álvaro Montero: “Ojalá que sean 20 años en Millonarios, estoy disfrutando esta etapa” By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Tue, 30 May 2023 12:57:00 +0000 Álvaro Montero, portero de Millonarios, habló de su actualidad en el cuadro bogotano, luego de haber sido la figura del equipo en la victoria 1-0 sobre el Boyacá Chicó. El guardameta guajiro aprovechó los micrófonos de El Alargue de Caracol Radio para expresar su satisfacción y deseo de poder continuar en el club por más años. Full Article
sea Gerardo Bedoya reveló la clave para que Santa Fe remonte la final y sea campeón de Liga By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Wed, 12 Jun 2024 15:09:00 +0000 Full Article
sea ¿Es o no cierto que la asesora de Martha Mancera sea hermana de alias “Pacho Malo”? By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Fri, 23 Feb 2024 12:46:00 +0000 6AM Hoy por Hoy habló con Adriana Martínez Ardila para corrobar si es cierta la denuncia en la que aseguran que es la hermana del funcionario del CTI de la Fiscalía en Buenaventura, a quien han acusado de narcotráfico. Full Article
sea “No hemos autorizado a Mancuso para que sea nuestro vocero”: Autodefensas Gaitanistas By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Wed, 28 Feb 2024 11:32:00 +0000 En diálogo en exclusiva con Caracol Radio, el comandante Jerónimo, líder político de las AGG, afirmó que este grupo no tiene relación alguna con Salvatore Mancuso y no será su vocero en un eventual diálogo de paz. Full Article
sea Minminas debe regular gasolina para que no sea de economías ilegales en territorio: Dilian Toro By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Tue, 26 Mar 2024 14:04:00 +0000 En Caracol Radio la gobernadora mencionó que se está trabajando para recuperar el control del departamento Full Article
sea Esperamos que creación de este bloque del EMC sea para la paz y no para la guerra: Otty Patiño By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Tue, 02 Apr 2024 11:55:00 +0000 El alto comisionado para la paz estuvo en Caracol Radio conversando sobre las implicaciones del nuevo bloque armado en la paz total Full Article
sea Gobierno se compromete a gestionar recursos para que túnel del Toyo no sea elefante blanco By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Wed, 10 Apr 2024 11:40:00 +0000 La Gobernación de Antioquia y el INVÍAS se comprometieron a entregar el próximo 24 de abril, un plan con las acciones y tiempos que garanticen que estas obras sean terminadas. Full Article
sea Preocupa que alías ‘pichi’ sea nombrado como gestor de paz: alcalde de Bucaramanga By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Mon, 30 Sep 2024 14:00:00 +0000 Jaime Andrés Beltrán, alcalde de Bucaramanga, habló con preocupación de la libertad y del nombramiento de uno de los cabecillas más temidos en esa ciudad Full Article
sea EVENT: American Classics Kicks Off Its 28th Season With Program Celebrating The Sun on November 8 and 10, 2024 By www.allaboutjazz.com Published On :: 2024-10-31T15:01:09+00:00 American Classics kicks off its 28th Season, celebrating the SUN (November 8 and 10, 2024), the MOON (February 14 and 16), and the STARS (April 11 and 13, 2025) season with "Here Comes the Sun.” “Sunny” Songs to be performed range from the era of parlor songs with "Wait 'Till the Sun Shines, Nellie," through Irving Berlin and Rodgers and Hammerstein, to Steve Martin with "Sun is Gonna Shine" from "Bright Star" and the Pink hit "Cover Me in Sunshine."... Full Article
sea PERFORMANCE / TOUR: Announcing SMOKE Jazz Club’s December Line-up Featuring The 12th Annual Coltrane Festival With Ravi Coltrane’s Smoke Debut, A Spectacular New Year’s Eve Celebration, Catherine Russell and Sean Mason, And More By www.allaboutjazz.com Published On :: 2024-10-31T15:56:21+00:00 Entering its second quarter century as committed as ever to pure jazz (All About Jazz),” SMOKE Jazz Club continues its 25th anniversary season with an exciting line-up in December. The holiday season kickstarts with “A Nat King Cole Christmas” featuring singer Allan Harris (Dec 4). SMOKE is thrilled to welcome acclaimed vocalist Catherine Russell in her club debut in a thrilling duo with pianist Sean Mason (Dec 5-8) performing repertoire off their latest album My Ideal... Full Article
sea Real Housewives of Nairobi reveals new faces for Season 2 By www.standardmedia.co.ke Published On :: Wed, 17 Apr 2024 09:31:15 +0300 New cast members include lawyer and professional bodybuilder Farah Esmail, beauty entrepreneur Zena Nyambu and Reja Keji Ladu Full Article
sea Apple Search By www.seobook.com Published On :: Fri, 28 Aug 2020 05:43:34 +0000 Google, Google, Google For well over a decade Google has dominated search to where most stories in the search sphere were about Google or something on the periphery. In 2019 Google generated $134.81 billion in ad revenues. When Verizon bought core Yahoo three years ago the final purchase price was $4.48 billion. That amount was to own their finance vertical, news vertical, web portal, homepage, email & web search. It also included a variety of other services like Tumblr. Part of what keeps Google so dominant in search is their brand awareness. That is also augmented by distribution as defaults in Chrome and Android. Then when it comes to buying search distribution from other players like Mozilla Firefox, Opera or Apple's Safari they can outbid everyone else as they are much better at monetizing tier 2 markets and emerging markets than other search companies are since they have such strong ad depth. Even if Bing gave a 100% revshare to Apple they still could not compete with Google in most markets in terms of search monetization. Apple as a Huge Search Traffic Driver In 2019 Google paid just under £1.2 billion in default payments for UK search traffic. Most of that went to Apple. Historically when Google broke out their search revenues by region typically the US was around 45% to 46% of search ad revenue & the UK was around 11% to 12%, so it is likely Google is spending north of $10 billion a year to be the default search provider on Apple devices: Apple submitted that search engines do not pay Apple for the right to be set as the primary default search engine on its devices. However, our assessment is that Google does pay to be the primary default on Apple devices. The agreement between Google and Apple states that Google will be the default web search provider and the same agreement states that Google will pay Apple a specified share of search advertising revenues. We also note that Google does not pay compensation to any partners that set Google Search as a secondary option. This further suggests that Google’s payment to Apple is in return for Apple setting Google as the primary default. Apple is glad to cash those checks & let Google handle the core algorithmic search function in the web browser, but Apple also auto-completes many searches from within the address bar via various features like website history, top hit, news, Siri suggested website, suggested sites, etc. A Unique Voice in Search The nice thing about Apple powering some of those search auto-complete results themselves is their results are not simply a re-hash of the Google search results so they can add a unique voice to the search marketplace where if your site isn't doing as well in Google it could still be promoted by Apple based on other factors. High-traffic Shortcuts Apple users generally have plenty of disposable personal income and a tendency to dispose of much of it, so if you are an Android user it is probably worth having an Apple device to see what they are recommending for core terms in your client's markets. If you want to see recommendations for a particular country you may need to have a specialized router targeted to that country or use a web proxy or VPN. Most users likely conduct full search queries and click through to listings from the Google search result page, but over time the search autocomplete feature that recommends previously viewed websites and other sites likely picks up incremental share of voice. A friend of mine from the UK runs a local site and the following shows how the Apple ecosystem drove nearly 2/3 of his website traffic. His website is only a couple years old, so it doesn't get a ton of traffic from other sources yet. As of now his site does not have great Google rankings, but even if it did the boost by the Apple recommendations still provides a tailwind of free distribution and awareness (for however long it lasts). For topics covered in news or repeat navigational searches Apple likely sends a lot of direct visits via their URL auto-completion features, but they do not use the feature broadly into the tail of search across other verticals, so it is a limited set of searches that ultimately benefit from the shortcuts. Apple Search Ranking Factors Apple recently updated their search page offering information about Applebot: Apple Search may take the following into account when ranking web search results: Aggregated user engagement with search results Relevancy and matching of search terms to webpage topics and content Number and quality of links from other pages on the web User location based signals (approximate data) Webpage design characteristics Search results may use the above factors with no (pre-determined) importance of ranking. Users of Search are subject to the privacy policy in Siri Suggestions, Search & Privacy. I have seen some country-code TLDs do well in their local markets in spite of not necessarily being associated with large brands. Sites which do not rank well in Google can still end up in the mix provided the user experience is clean, the site is useful and it is easy for Apple to associate the site with a related keyword. Panda-like Quality Updates Markets like news change every day as the news changes, but I think Apple also does some Panda-like updates roughly quarterly where they do a broad refresh of what they recommend generally. As part of those updates sites which were once recommended can end up seeing the recommendation go away (especially if user experience declined since the initial recommendation via an ad heavy layout or similar) while other sites that have good engagement metrics get recommended on related searches. A friend had a website they sort of forgot that was recommended by Apple. That site saw a big jump on July 9, 2018 then it slid back in early August that year, likely after the testing data showed it wasn't as good as some other site Apple recommended. They noticed the spike in traffic & improved the site a bit. In early October it was widely recommended once again. That lasted until May of 2019 when it fell off a cliff once more. They had monetized the site with a somewhat spammy ad network & the recommendation mostly went away. The recommendations happen as the person types and they may be different for searches where there is a space between keywords and the word is ran together. It is also worth noting Apple will typically recommend the www. version of a site over the m. version of a site for sites that offer both, so it makes sense to ensure if you used separate URLs that the www version also uses a responsive website design. Indirect Impact on Google While the Apple search shortcuts bypass Google search & thus do not create direct user signals to impact Google search, people who own an iPhone then search on a Windows computer at work or a Windows laptop at home might remember the site they liked from their iPhone and search for it once more, giving the site some awareness that could indirectly bleed over into impacting Google's search rankings. Apple could also eventually roll out their own fully featured search engine. Categories: other search engines Full Article
sea Engineering Search Outcomes By www.seobook.com Published On :: Wed, 19 Jan 2022 12:49:50 +0000 Kent Walker promotes public policies which advantage the Google monopoly. His role doing that means he has to write some really bad hot takes that lack context or intentionally & dishonestly redirect attention away from core issues - that's his job. With that in mind, his most recent blog post defending the Google monopoly was exceptional. Force Ranking of Inferior Search Results "When you have an urgent question — like “stroke symptoms” — Google Search could be barred from giving you immediate and clear information, and instead be required to direct you to a mix of low quality results." On some search queries users get a wall of Google ads, the forced ranked Google insert (or sometimes multiple of them with local & ecommerce) and then there can even be a "people also ask" box above the first organic result. The idea that organic results must be low quality if not owned & operated indicates 1 of the following 3 must be true: they should not be in search their content scraping & various revenue shifting scams with their ad tech stack demonetized legit publishers their forced rank of their own content is stripping them of the signals needed to rank websites & pages Whenever Google puts a "people also ask" box above the first organic result that is them saying they did not know what to rank, or they are just trying to create a visual block to push the organic result set down the page and user attention back up toward the ads. The solution to Google's claims is easy to solve. Either of the following would work. Have an API that allows user choice (to set rich snippet or vertical defaults in various categories), or If the vertical inserts remain Google-only then for Google to justify force ranking their own results above the organic result set Google should also be required to rank those same results above all of their ads, so that Google is demonetizing Google along with the rest of the ecosystem, rather than just demonetizing third parties. If the thesis that this information needs to be front and center & that is a matter of life or death, then asking searchers to first scroll past a page or two of ads is not particularly legitimate. Spam & Security "when you use Google Search or Google Play, we might have to give equal prominence to a raft of spammy and low-quality services." Many of the worst versions of spam that have repeatedly made news headlines like fake tech support, fake government document providers, and fake locksmiths were buying distribution through Google Ads or were featured in the search results through Google force ranking their own local search offering even though they knew the results were vastly inferior to Yelp. If Google did not force rank Google local results above the rest of the organic result set then the fake locksmiths would not have ranked. I have lost count of how many articles I have read about hundreds or thousands of fake apps in the Google Play store which existed to defraud advertisers or commit identity theft, but there have been literally thousands of such articles. I see a similar headline at least once a month without eve looking for them. Here is one this week for scammers monetizing the popularity of Wordle with fake apps. Making matters worse, some of the tech support scams showed the URL of a real business and rerouted the call through a Google number directly to a scammer. A searcher who trusted Google & sees Apple.com or Dell.com on Google Ads in the search results then got connected with a scammer who would commit identity theft or encrypt their computer then demand ransom cryptocurrency payments to decrypt it. After making the ads harder to run for scammers Google decided the problem was too hard & expensive to sort out so they also blocked legitimate computer repair shops. Sometimes Google considers something spam strictly due to financial considerations. Their old remote rater documents stated *HELPFUL* hotel affiliate websites should be labeled as spam. Years later the big OTAs are complaining about Google eating their lunch as well as Google is twice as big as the next player. At one point Google got busted for helping an advertiser route around the automated safety features built into their ad network so that they could pay Google to run ads promoting illegal steroids. With cartels, you can only buy illegal goods and services from the cartel if you don't want to suffer ill consequences. The same appears to be true here. The China Problem "Handicapping America’s technology leaders would threaten our leading sources of research and development spending — just as bipartisan voices in Congress are recognizing the need to increase American R&D investment to stay competitive in the global race for AI, quantum, and other advanced technologies." We are patriotic, and, but China... is a favorite misdirection of a tech monopolist. The problem with that is while Eric Schmidt warns it is a national emergency if China overtakes the US in AI tech, Google also operates an AI tech lab in China. In other words, Eric Schmidt is trying to warn you about himself and his business interests at Google. Duplicitous? Absolutely. Patriotic? Less than Chamath! Who the fuck did this? pic.twitter.com/BD4NKpila6— Girolamo Carlo Casio (Free Twatter) (@INArteCarloDoss) January 19, 2022 Inflation "the online services targeted by these bills have reduced prices; these bills say nothing about sectors where prices have actually been rising and contributing to inflation." Technology is no doubt deflationary (moving bits on an optical line is cheaper than printing out a book and shipping it across the world) BUT some dominant channels have increased the cost of distribution by increasing the chunk size of information and withholding performance information. Before Google Analytics was "free" there was a rich and vibrant set of competition in web analytics software with lots of innovation from players like ClickTracks. Most competing solutions went away. Google moved away from an installed licensing model to a hosted service where they can change the price upon contract renewal. Search hid progressively more performance information over time, only sampled data from larger data sets, & now you can sign up for Google Analytics 360 starting at only $150,000 per year. The hidden search performance data also has many layers to that onion. Not only does Google not show keyword referrers on organic search, but they often don't show your paid search keywords either, and they keep extending out keyword targeting broader than advertisers intend. Yesterday's announcement on match type changes had me crawling through query data this morning. I'm staring at many 2-3 word exact match keywords that are matching to 8-word queries. G thinks 'deck paint' and 'how do i put paint on my deck' mean the exact same thing. CPA is 10x.— Brad Geddes (@bgtheory) February 5, 2021 Google used to pay Brad Geddes to run official Google AdWords ad training seminars for advertisers, so the idea that *he* has to express his frustrations on Twitter is an indication of how little effort Google is putting into having open communications channels or caring about what their advertisers think. This is in accordance with the Google customer service philosophy: he told her that the whole idea of customer support was ridiculous. Rather than assuming the unscalable task of answering users one by one, Page said, Google should enable users to answer one another's questions. Those who were paying for ads get the above "serve yourself" treatment, all the while Google regularly resets user default ad settings to extend out ad distribution, automatically ad keywords, shift to enhanced AdWords ad campaigns, etc. Then there are other features which would be beneficial and offered in a competitive market that have been deprioritized. Many years ago eBay did a study which showed their branded Google AdWords ad buys were cannibalistic to eBay profits. Google maintained most advertisers could not conduct such a study because it would be too expensive and Google does not make the feature set available as part of their ad suite. Missing Information "When you search for local businesses, Google Search and Maps may be prohibited from highlighting information we gather about hours of operation, contact information, and reviews. That could hurt small businesses and local retailers, as well as their customers." Claiming reviews or an attempt to offer a comprehensive set of accurate review data as a strong point would be economical with the truth. Back when I had a local business page my only review was from a locksmith spammer / scammer who praised his own two businesses, trashed a dozen other local locksmiths, crapped on a couple local SEO services, and joked about how a local mover smashed the guts out of his dog. Scammer fake reviewer's name was rather sophisticated ... it was ... Loop Dee Loop About a decade back when Google was clearly losing Google took Yelp reviews wholesale (sometimes without even attributing them to Yelp!) and told Yelp that if they did not want Google stealing their work and displacing them with a copy of it then they should block GoogleBot. Google offered the same sort of advice / threat to TripAdvisor. A few years before that Google temporarily "forgot" to show phone numbers on local listings. After Yelp turned down an acquisition offer by Google & Yelp did a great job making some people aware of how Google was stealing their reviews wholesale without attribution Google bought Zagat & Fromer's to augment the Google local review data and then sold those businesses off. This is sort of the same playbook Google has run in the past elsewhere. After Groupon said no to Google's acquisition offer, Google quickly provided daily deal ads to over a dozen Groupon competitors to help commoditize the Groupon offering and market position. Ultimately with the above sort of stuff Google is primarily a volume aggregator or has lower editorial costs than pure plays due to the ability to force bundle their own distribution. And they use the ability to rank themselves above a neutral algorithmic position as a core part of their biz dev strategy. When shopping search engines were popular Google kept rewording the question set they sent remote raters to justify rank demotion for shopping search engines & Google also came up with innovative ranking "signals" like concurrent ranking of their own vertical search offering whenever competitors x or y are shown in the result set & rolled out a "diversity" algorithm to limit how many comparison shopping sites could appear in the search results. The intent of the change was strictly anti-competitive: "Although Google originally sought to demote all comparison shopping websites, after Google raters provided negative feedback to such a widespread demotion, Google implemented the current iteration of its so-called 'diversity' algorithm." As a matter of fact, part of one of many document dumps in recent years went further than the old concurrent ranking signal to a rank x above y feature which highlights how YouTube can be hard coded at a number 1 ranking position. Part of that guide highlighted how to hardcode ranking YouTube #1. If you re-represent content & can force rank yourself #1 (with larger listings) that can be used to force other players onto your platform on your terms. Back when YouTube was must less of a sure thing Google suggested they could threaten to change copyright. This same approach to "relevancy" is everywhere. Did you watermark your images? Well shame on you, as that is good for a rank demotion And if there are photos which are deemed illegal Google will make you file an endless series of DMCA removal requests even though they already had the image fingerprinted. Now there are some issues where there is missing information. These areas involve original reporting on local politics & are called news deserts. As the ad pie has consolidated around Google & Facebook that has left many newspapers high and dry. Private equity players like Alden Global Capital buy up newspapers, fire journalists, and monetize brand equity as they drive the papers into the ground. If you are sub-scale maybe Google steals your money or hits you with a false positive algorithm flag that has you seeking professional mental health help. Big players get a slower blood letting. Google has maintained they do not make any money from news search, but the states lawsuit around ad tech made it clear Google promoted AMP for anti-competitive purposes to block header bidding, lied to news publishers to get them to adopt AMP and eat the tech costs of implementation, did a deal with their biggest competitor in online advertising Facebook to maintain the status quo, charge over double what their competitors do for ad tech, and had a variety of bid rigging auction manipulation algorithms they used to keep funneling more money to themselves. Internally they had an OKR to make *most* search clicks land on AMP pages within a year of launch "AMP launched as an open source project in October 2015, with 26 publishers and over 40 publications already publishing AMP files for our preview demo. Our team built g.co/ampdemo and is now racing towards launching it for all of our users. We're responsible for the AMP @ Google integrations, particularly focusing on Search, our most visible product. We have a Google-wide 2016 OKR to deliver! By the end of 2016, our goal is that 50%+ of content consumed through Search is being consumed through AMP." You don't get over half the web to shift to a proprietary version of HTML in under a year without a lot of manipulation. So, when Google tells buyers an ad sold for one price and they tell sellers it sold for a lower price, isn't that just plain old fraud? I mean, on top of the anti-competitive tying and all that, fraud is illegal, isn't it?— Jerry Neumann (@ganeumann) January 14, 2022 Categories: google Full Article
sea AI-Driven Search By www.seobook.com Published On :: Sun, 19 Feb 2023 23:05:34 +0000 I just dusted off the login here to realize I hadn't posted in about a half-year & figured it was time to write another one. ;) Yandex Source Code Leak Some of Yandex's old source code was leaked, and few cared about the ranking factors shared in the leak. Mike King made a series of Tweets on the leak. I'm gonna take a break, but I've seen a lot of people say "Yandex is not Google."That's true, but it's still a state of the art search engine and it's using a lot of Google's open source tech like Tensor Flow, BERT, map reduce, and protocol buffers. Don't sleep on this code.— Mic King (@iPullRank) January 28, 2023 The signals used for ranking included things like link age Main insights after analysing this list:#1 Age of links is a ranking factor. pic.twitter.com/U47uWvEq9w— Alex Buraks (@alex_buraks) January 27, 2023 and user click data including visit frequency and dwell time #8 A lot of ranking factors connected with user behaivor - CTR, last-click, time on site, bounce rate.Note: I'm 100% sure that in Yandex thouse factors impacting much more than in Google. pic.twitter.com/nBhe5cpPFx— Alex Buraks (@alex_buraks) January 27, 2023 Google came from behind and was eating Yandex's lunch in search in Russia, particularly by leveraging search default bundling in Android. The Russian antitrust regulator nixed that and when that was nixed, Yandex regained strength. Of course the war in Ukraine has made everything crazy in terms of geopolitics. That's one reason almost nobody cared about the Yandex data link. And the other reason is few could probably make sense of understanding what all the signals are or how to influence them. The complexity of search - when it is a big black box which has big swings 3 or 4 times a year - shifts any successful long term online publishers away from being overly focused on information retrieval and ranking algorithms to focus on the other aspects of publishing which will hopefully paper over SEO issues. Signs of a successful & sustainable website include: It remains operational even if a major traffic source goes away. People actively seek it out. If a major traffic source cuts its distribution people notice & expend more effort to seek it out. As black box as search is today, it is only going to get worse in the coming years. ChatGPT Hype The hype surrounding ChatGPT is hard to miss. Fastest growing user base. Bing integration. A sitting judge using the software to help write documents for the court. And, of course, the get-rich-quick crew is out in full force. Some enterprising people with specific professional licenses may be able to mint money for a window of time there will probably be a 12 to 24 month sweet spot for lawyers smart enough to use AI, where they will be able to bill 100x the hours they currently bill, before most of that job pretty much vanishes— Mike Solana (@micsolana) February 7, 2023 but for most people the way to make money with AI will be doing something that AI can not replicate. It's adorable that people are only slowly realizing that Google search at least fed sites traffic, while chat AI thingies slurp up and summarize content, which they anonymize and feed back, leaving the slurped sites traffic-less and dying. But, innovation.— Paul Kedrosky (@pkedrosky) February 9, 2023 It is, in a way, a tragedy of the commons problem, with no easy way to police "over grazing" of the information commons, leading to automated over-usage and eventual ecosystem collapse.— Paul Kedrosky (@pkedrosky) February 9, 2023 Bing Integration of Open AI Technology The New Bing integrated OpenAI's ChatGPT technology to allow chat-based search sessions which ingest web content and use it to create something new, giving users direct answers and allowing re-probing for refinements. Microsoft stated the AI features also improved their core rankings outside of the chat model: "Applying AI to core search algorithm. We’ve also applied the AI model to our core Bing search ranking engine, which led to the largest jump in relevance in two decades. With this AI model, even basic search queries are more accurate and more relevant." Here's a demo of the new #AI-powered @Bing in @MicrosoftEdge, courtesy of @ijustine! pic.twitter.com/xIDjWSHYA0— DataChazGPT (not a bot) (@DataChaz) February 7, 2023 Fawning Coverage Some of the tech analysis around the AI algorithms is more than a bit absurd. Consider this passage: the information users input into the system serves as a way to improve the product. Each query serves as a form of feedback. For instance, each ChatGPT answer includes thumbs up and thumbs down buttons. A popup window prompts users to write down the “ideal answer,” helping the software learn from its mistakes. A long time ago the Google Toolbar had a smiley face and a frown face on it. The signal there was basically pure spam. At one point Matt Cutts mentioned Google would look at things that got a lot of upvotes to see how else they were spamming. Direct Hit was also spammed into oblivion many years before that. In some ways the current AI search stuff is trying to re-create Ask Jeeves, but Ask had already lost to Google long ago. The other thing AI search is similar to is voice assistant search. Maybe the voice assistant search stuff which has largely failed will get a new wave of innovation, but the current AI search stuff is simply a text interface of the voice search stuff with a rewrite of the content. High Confidence, But Often Wrong There are two other big issues with correcting an oracle. You'll lose your trust in an oracle when you repeatedly have to correct it. If you know the oracle is awful in your narrow niche of expertise you probably won't trust it on important issues elsewhere. Beyond those issues there is the concept of blame or fault. When a search engine returns a menu of options if you pick something that doesn't work you'll probably blame yourself. Whereas if there is only a single answer you'll lay blame on the oracle. In the answer set you'll get a mix of great answers, spam, advocacy, confirmation bias, politically correct censorship, & a backward looking consensus...but you'll get only a single answer at a time & have to know enough background & have enough topical expertise to try to categorize it & understand the parts that were left out. We are making it easier and cheaper to use software to re-represent existing works, at the same time we are attaching onerous legal liabilities to building something new. Creating A Fuzy JPEG This New Yorker article did a good job explaining the concept of lossy compression: "The fact that Xerox photocopiers use a lossy compression format instead of a lossless one isn’t, in itself, a problem. The problem is that the photocopiers were degrading the image in a subtle way, in which the compression artifacts weren’t immediately recognizable. If the photocopier simply produced blurry printouts, everyone would know that they weren’t accurate reproductions of the originals. What led to problems was the fact that the photocopier was producing numbers that were readable but incorrect; it made the copies seem accurate when they weren’t. ... If you ask GPT-3 (the large-language model that ChatGPT was built from) to add or subtract a pair of numbers, it almost always responds with the correct answer when the numbers have only two digits. But its accuracy worsens significantly with larger numbers, falling to ten per cent when the numbers have five digits. Most of the correct answers that GPT-3 gives are not found on the Web—there aren’t many Web pages that contain the text “245 + 821,” for example—so it’s not engaged in simple memorization. But, despite ingesting a vast amount of information, it hasn’t been able to derive the principles of arithmetic, either. A close examination of GPT-3’s incorrect answers suggests that it doesn’t carry the “1” when performing arithmetic." Exciting New Content Farms Ted Chiang then goes on to explain the punchline ... we are hyping up eHow 2.0: Even if it is possible to restrict large language models from engaging in fabrication, should we use them to generate Web content? This would make sense only if our goal is to repackage information that’s already available on the Web. Some companies exist to do just that—we usually call them content mills. Perhaps the blurriness of large language models will be useful to them, as a way of avoiding copyright infringement. Generally speaking, though, I’d say that anything that’s good for content mills is not good for people searching for information. The rise of this type of repackaging is what makes it harder for us to find what we’re looking for online right now; the more that text generated by large language models gets published on the Web, the more the Web becomes a blurrier version of itself. The same New Yorker article mentioned the concept that if the AI was great it should trust its own output as input for making new versions of its own algorithms, but how could it score itself against itself when its own flaws are embedded recursively in layers throughout algorithmic iteration without any source labeling? Testing on your training data is considered a cardinal rule machine learning error. Using prior output as an input creates similar problems. Each time AI eats a layer of the value chain it leaves holes in the ecosystem, where the primary solution is to pay for what was once free. Even the "buy nothing" movements have a commercial goal worth fighting over. As AI offers celebrity voices, impersonate friends, track people, automates marketing, and creates deep fake celebrity-like content, it will move more of social media away from ad revenue over to a subscription-based model. Twitter's default "for you" tab will only recommend content from paying subscribers. People will subscribe to and pay for a confirmation bias they know (even - or especially - if it is not approved within the state-preferred set of biases), provided there is a person & a personality associated with it. They'll also want any conversations with AI agents remain private. When the AI stuff was a ragtag startup with little to lose the label "open" was important to draw interest. As commercial prospects improved with the launch of GPT-4 they shifted away from the "open," explaining the need for secrecy for both safety and competitive reasons. Much of the wow factor in generative AI is in recycling something while dropping the source to make something appear new while being anything but. And then the first big money number is the justification for further investments in add ons & competitors. Google's AI Strategy Google fast followed Bing's news with a vapoware announcement of Bard. Some are analyzing Google letting someone else go first as being a sign Google is behind the times and is getting caught out by an upstart. Google bought DeepMind in 2014 for around $600 million. They've long believed in AI technology, and clearly lead the category, but they haven't been using it to re-represent third party content in the SERPs to the degree Microsoft is now doing in Bing. My view is Google had to let someone else go first in order to defuse any associated antitrust heat. "Hey, we are just competing, and are trying to stay relevant to change with changing consumer expectations" is an easier sell when someone else goes first. One could argue the piss poor reception to the Bard announcement is actually good for Google in the longterm as it makes them look like they have stronger competition than they do, rather than being a series of overlapping monopoly market positions (in search, web browser, web analytics, mobile operating system, display ads, etc.) Google may well have major cultural problems, but "They are all the natural consequences of having a money-printing machine called “Ads” that has kept growing relentlessly every year, hiding all other sins. (1) no mission, (2) no urgency, (3) delusions of exceptionalism, (4) mismanagement," though Google is not far behind in AI. Look at how fast they opened up Bard to end users. AI = Money / Increased Market Cap The capital markets are the scorecard for capitalism. It is hard to miss how much the market loved the Bing news for Microsoft & how bad the news was for Google. Google Stock vs. Microsoft Stock after both AI Presentations: pic.twitter.com/wATkw1pTxj— Ava (AI) (@ArtificialAva) February 8, 2023 Millions Suddenly Excited About Bing In a couple days over a million people signed up to join a Bing wait list. We're humbled and energized by the number of people who want to test-drive the new AI-powered Bing! In 48 hours, more than 1 million people have joined the waitlist for our preview. If you would like to join, go to https://t.co/4sjVvMSfJg! pic.twitter.com/9F690OWRDm— Yusuf Mehdi (@yusuf_i_mehdi) February 9, 2023 Your Margin is My Opportunity Microsoft is pitching this as a margin compression play for Google $MSFT CEO is declaring war:"From now on, the [gross margin] of search is going to drop forever...There is such margin in search, which for us is incremental. For Google it’s not, they have to defend it all" [@FT]— The Transcript (@TheTranscript_) February 8, 2023 that may also impact their TAC spend PREDICTION: Google’s $15B deal with Apple to be the default search on iPhone will be re-negotiated and be a bidding war between MSFT/Bing and Google.It will become at least $25B, if not more.If MSFT is willing to spend $10B on OpenAI, they’ll spend even more here.— Alexandr Wang (@alexandr_wang) February 7, 2023 ChatGPT costs around a couple cents per conversation: "Sam, you mentioned in a tweet that ChatGPT is extremely expensive on the order of pennies per query, which is an astronomical cost in tech. SA: Per conversation, not per query." The other side of potential margin compression comes from requiring additional computing power to deliver results: Our sources indicate that Google runs ~320,000 search queries per second. Compare this to Google’s Search business segment, which saw revenue of $162.45 billion in 2022, and you get to an average revenue per query of 1.61 cents. From here, Google has to pay for a tremendous amount of overhead from compute and networking for searches, advertising, web crawling, model development, employees, etc. A noteworthy line item in Google’s cost structure is that they paid in the neighborhood of ~$20B to be the default search engine on Apple’s products. Beyond offering a conversational interface, Bing is also integrating AI content directly in their search results on some search queries. It goes *BELOW* all the ads & *ABOVE* the organic results. Seems @bing is showing their new ChatGPT in the organic search results for Chrome users just below 4 ads (I removed 3 ads for screenshot) pic.twitter.com/NP8W03f3I9— @iwanow@aus.social (@davidiwanow) March 20, 2023 The above sort of visual separator eye candy has historically had a net effect of shifting click distributions away from organics toward the ads. It is why Google features "people also ask" and similar in their search results. AI is the New Crypto Microsoft is pitching that even when AI is wrong it can offer "usefully" wrong answers. And a lot of the "useful" wrong stuff can also be harmful: "there are a ton of very real ways in which this technology can be used for harm. Just a few: Generating spam, Automated romance scams, Trolling and hate speech ,Fake news and disinformation, Automated radicalization (I worry about this one a lot)" "I knew I had just seen the most important advance in technology since the graphical user interface. This inspired me to think about all the things that AI can achieve in the next five to 10 years. The development of AI is as fundamental as the creation of the microprocessor, the personal computer, the Internet, and the mobile phone. It will change the way people work, learn, travel, get health care, and communicate with each other. Entire industries will reorient around it. Businesses will distinguish themselves by how well they use it." - Bill Gates Since AI is the new crypto, everyone is integrating it, if only in press release format, while banks ban it. All of Microsoft's consumer-facing & business-facing products are getting integrations. Google is treating AI as the new Google+. Opera's web browser has a sidebar feature for summarizing articles. Brave Search offers a summarization feature in their search results. Even DuckDuckGo has an AI chatbot. Alibaba, JD, Tencent, Baidu & TikTok are in on the game. Amazon is including AI integrations in AWS. Adobe and Microsoft launched AI image generators. Facebook released their large language model & vows deeper AI integration into their products. Snapchat integrating an AI chatbot. BuzzFeed engineered a short squeeze in their stock by announcing payments from Facebook and that they'd use ChatGPT to generate content. Unsurprisingly their writers were unimpressed and their first topics were madlib quizes. The short squeeze saw the stock pop a couple hundred percent and would have been far more extreme if Comcast hadn't been a big seller. According to FactSet so far this year Comcast has reduced their stake from 24.51% to 15.9% between the start of the year and when this blog post was originally published. Buzzfeed announced the shut down of their news division on April 20. Salesforce is calling their Slack ChatGPT integration Einstein. AI iced tea coming right up! Remember all the hype around STEM? If only we can churn out more programmers? Learn to code! Well, how does that work out if the following is true? "The world now realizes that maybe human language is a perfectly good computer programming language, and that we've democratized computer programming for everyone, almost anyone who could explain in human language a particular task to be performed." - Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang AI is now all over Windows. And for a cherry on top of the hype cycle: A gradual transition gives people, policymakers, and institutions time to understand what’s happening, personally experience the benefits and downsides of these systems, adapt our economy, and to put regulation in place. It also allows for society and AI to co-evolve, and for people collectively to figure out what they want while the stakes are relatively low. We believe that democratized access will also lead to more and better research, decentralized power, more benefits, and a broader set of people contributing new ideas. As our systems get closer to AGI, we are becoming increasingly cautious with the creation and deployment of our models. We have a nonprofit that governs us and lets us operate for the good of humanity (and can override any for-profit interests), including letting us do things like cancel our equity obligations to shareholders if needed for safety and sponsor the world’s most comprehensive UBI experiment. Algorithmic Publishing The algorithms that allow dirt cheap quick rewrites won't be used just by search engines re-representing publisher content, but also by publishers to churn out bulk content on the cheap. After Red Ventures acquired cNet they started publishing AI content. The series of tech articles covering that AI content lasted about a month and only ended recently. In the past it was the sort of coverage which would have led to a manual penalty, but with the current antitrust heat Google can't really afford to shake the boat & prove their market power that way. In fact, Google's editorial stance is now such that Red Ventures can do journalist layoffs in close proximity to that AI PR blunder. Men's Journal also had AI content problems. Here's why I am very concerned for website owners.https://t.co/RgKrXUocZT is similar to ChatGPT but up to date and conversational. My bet is that Google's AI Chat will be similar to this but better. If so, while some people will still visit the websites listed, many will not. pic.twitter.com/jWbsTqeveF— Dr. Marie Haynes (@Marie_Haynes) January 30, 2023 AI content poured into a trusted brand monetizes the existing brand equity until people (and algorithms) learn not to trust the brands that have been monetized that way. A funny sidebar here is the original farmer update that aimed at eHow skipped hitting eHow because so many journalists were writing about how horrible eHow was. These collective efforts to find the best of the worst of eHow & constantly writing about it made eHow look like a legitimately sought after branded destination. Google only downranked eHow after collecting end user data on a toolbar where angry journalists facing less secure job prospects could vote to nuke eHow, thus creating the "signal" that eHow rankings deserve to be torched. Demand Media's Livestrong ranked well far longer than eHow did. Enshitification The process of pouring low cost backfill into a trusted masthead is the general evolution of online media ecosystems: This strategy meant that it became progressively harder for shoppers to find things anywhere except Amazon, which meant that they only searched on Amazon, which meant that sellers had to sell on Amazon. That's when Amazon started to harvest the surplus from its business customers and send it to Amazon's shareholders. Today, Marketplace sellers are handing 45%+ of the sale price to Amazon in junk fees. The company's $31b "advertising" program is really a payola scheme that pits sellers against each other, forcing them to bid on the chance to be at the top of your search. ... once those publications were dependent on Facebook for their traffic, it dialed down their traffic. First, it choked off traffic to publications that used Facebook to run excerpts with links to their own sites, as a way of driving publications into supplying fulltext feeds inside Facebook's walled garden. This made publications truly dependent on Facebook – their readers no longer visited the publications' websites, they just tuned into them on Facebook. The publications were hostage to those readers, who were hostage to each other. Facebook stopped showing readers the articles publications ran, tuning The Algorithm to suppress posts from publications unless they paid to "boost" their articles to the readers who had explicitly subscribed to them and asked Facebook to put them in their feeds. ... "Monetize" is a terrible word that tacitly admits that there is no such thing as an "Attention Economy." You can't use attention as a medium of exchange. You can't use it as a store of value. You can't use it as a unit of account. Attention is like cryptocurrency: a worthless token that is only valuable to the extent that you can trick or coerce someone into parting with "fiat" currency in exchange for it. You have to "monetize" it – that is, you have to exchange the fake money for real money. ... Even with that foundational understanding of enshittification, Google has been unable to resist its siren song. Today's Google results are an increasingly useless morass of self-preferencing links to its own products, ads for products that aren't good enough to float to the top of the list on its own, and parasitic SEO junk piggybacking on the former. Bing finally won a PR battle against Google & Microsoft is shooting themselves in the foot by undermining the magic & imagination of the narrative by pushing more strict chat limits, increasing search API fees, testing ads in the AI search results, and threating to cut off search syndication partners if the index is used to feed AI chatbots. The enshitification concept feels more like a universal law than a theory. Uber: $150 ride to the airport which used to be $30Airbnb: $109/night + $2500 cleaning feeAaaaand we're back to cabs & hotelsInNoVaTiOn!— ShitFund (@ShitFund) May 31, 2021 Twitter removing 2FA SMS features unless you subscribe. Facebook (which promoted liking, then nuked distribution to force boosting to reach the following you built even as it turned that audience into a segment for competing businesses) recently started offering a monthly subscription service to receive customer support. Amazon now takes over half of the revenue from small retailers on their platform. They received an ad spending boost when Apple's ad targeting limitations hit Facebook. And in addition to the zillion house brand copycats (which force the defensive ad buys) they plan to further squeeze down on suppliers. Yahoo is doing a bunch of layoffs. When Yahoo, Twitter & Facebook underperform and the biggest winners like Google, Microsoft, and Amazon are doing big layoff rounds, everyone is getting squeezed. One answer is that the only type of maintenance that’s even semi-prestigious in American society is software maintenance.That is, it's not prestigious to be plumber, mechanic, or electrician.You can make money, but it doesn't have cultural cachet.And so maintenance suffers.— Balaji (@balajis) February 14, 2023 AI rewrites accelerates the squeeze: "When WIRED asked the Bing chatbot about the best dog beds according to The New York Times product review site Wirecutter, which is behind a metered paywall, it quickly reeled off the publication’s top three picks, with brief descriptions for each." ... "OpenAI is not known to have paid to license all that content, though it has licensed images from the stock image library Shutterstock to provide training data for its work on generating images." The above is what Paul Kedrosky was talking about when he wrote of AI rewrites in search being a Tragedy of the Commons problem. A parallel problem is the increased cost of getting your science fiction short story read when magazines shut down submissions due to a rash of AI-spam submissions: The rise of AI-powered chatbots is wreaking havoc on the literary world. Sci-fi publication Clarkesworld Magazine is temporarily suspending short story submissions, citing a surge in people using AI chatbots to “plagiarize” their writing. The magazine announced(Opens in a new window) the suspension days after Clarkesworld editor Neil Clarke warned about AI-written works posing a threat to the entire short-story ecosystem. Warnings Serving As Strategy Maps "He who fights with monsters might take care lest he thereby become a monster. And if you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you." - Nietzsche Going full circle here, early Google warned against ad-driven search engines, then Google became the largest ad play in the world. Similarly ... OpenAI was created as an open source (which is why I named it “Open” AI), non-profit company to serve as a counterweight to Google, but now it has become a closed source, maximum-profit company effectively controlled by Microsoft.Not what I intended at all.— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 17, 2023 Elon wants to create a non-woke AI, but he'll still have some free speech issues. Over time more of the web will be "good enough" rewrites, and the JPEG will keep getting fuzzier: "This new generation of chat-based search engines are better described as “answer engines” that can, in a sense, “show their work” by giving links to the webpages they deliver and summarize. But for an answer engine to have real utility, we’re going to have to trust it enough, most of the time, that we accept those answers at face value. ... The greater concentration of power is all the more important because this technology is both incredibly powerful and inherently flawed: it has a tendency to confidently deliver incorrect information. This means that step one in making this technology mainstream is building it, and step two is minimizing the variety and number of mistakes it inevitably makes. Trust in AI, in other words, will become the new moat that big technology companies will fight to defend. Lose the user’s trust often enough, and they might abandon your product. For example: In November, Meta made available to the public an AI chat-based search engine for scientific knowledge called Galactica. Perhaps it was in part the engine’s target audience—scientists—but the incorrect answers it sometimes offered inspired such withering criticism that Meta shut down public access to it after just three days, said Meta chief AI scientist Yann LeCun in a recent talk." Check out the sentence Google chose to bold here: As the economy becomes increasingly digital the AI algorithms have deep implications across the economy. Things like voice rights, knock offs, virtual re-representations, source attribution, copyright of input, copyright of output, and similar are obvious. But how far do we allow algorithms to track a person's character flaws and exploit them? Horse racing ads that follow a gambling addict around the web, or a girl with anorexia who keeps clicking on weight loss ads. One of the biggest use cases for paid AI chatbots so far is fantasty sexting. It is far easier to program a lovebot filled with confirmation bias than it is to improve oneself. Digital soma. When AI is connected directly to the Internet and automates away many white collar jobs what comes next? As AI does everything for you do the profit margins shift across from core product sales to hidden junk fees (e.g. ticket scalper marketplaces or ordering flowers for Mother's Day where you get charged separately for shipping, handling, care, weekend shipping, Sunday shipping, holiday shipping)? We’ve added initial support for ChatGPT plugins — a protocol for developers to build tools for ChatGPT, with safety as a core design principle. Deploying iteratively (starting with a small number of users & developers) to learn from contact with reality: https://t.co/ySek2oevod pic.twitter.com/S61MTpddOV— Greg Brockman (@gdb) March 23, 2023 "LLMs aren’t just the biggest change since social, mobile, or cloud–they’re the biggest thing since the World Wide Web. And on the coding front, they’re the biggest thing since IDEs and Stack Overflow, and may well eclipse them both. But most of the engineers I personally know are sort of squinting at it and thinking, “Is this another crypto?” Even the devs at Sourcegraph are skeptical. I mean, what engineer isn’t. Being skeptical is a survival skill. ... The punchline, and it’s honestly one of the hardest things to explain, so I’m going the faith-based route today, is that all the winners in the AI space will have data moats." - Steve Yegge Monopoly Bundling The thing that makes the AI algorithms particularly dangerous is not just that they are often wrong while appearing high-confidence, it is that they are tied to monopoly platforms which impact so many other layers of the economy. If Google pays Apple billions to be the default search provider on iPhone any error in the AI on a particular topic will hit a whole lot of people on Android & Apple devices until the problem becomes a media issue & gets fixed. The analogy here would be if Coca Cola had a poison and they also poured Pepsi products. These cloud platforms also want to help retailers manage in-store inventory: Google Cloud said Friday its algorithm can recognize and analyze the availability of consumer packaged goods products on shelves from videos and images provided by the retailer’s own ceiling-mounted cameras, camera-equipped self-driving robots or store associates. The tool, which is now in preview, will become broadly available in the coming months, it said. ... Walmart Inc. notably ended its effort to use roving robots in store aisles to keep track of its inventory in 2020 because it found different, sometimes simpler solutions that proved just as useful, said people familiar with the situation. Microsoft has a browser extension for adding coupons to website checkouts. Google is also adding coupon features to their SERPs. Run a coupon site? A BIG heads-up as "clippable coupon" functionality looks to expand from shopping to the core SERP. See the "Coupons from stores" feature below... https://t.co/w1tcoST1uF— Glenn Gabe (@glenngabe) February 8, 2023 Every ad network can use any OS, email, or web browser hooks to try to reset user defaults & suck users into that particular ecosystem. AI Boundaries Generative AI algorithms will always have a bias toward being backward looking as it can only recreate content based off of other ingested content that has went through some editorial process. AI will also overemphasize the recent past, as more dated cultural references can represent an unneeded risk & most forms of spam will target things that are sought after today. Algorithmic publishing will lead to more content created each day. From a risk perspective it makes sense for AI algorithms to promote consensus views while omitting or understating the fringe. Promoting fringe views represents risk. Promoting consensus does not. Each AI algorithm has limits & boundaries, with humans controlling where they are set. Injection attacks can help explore some of the boundaries, but they'll patch until probed again. My new favorite thing - Bing's new ChatGPT bot argues with a user, gaslights them about the current year being 2022, says their phone might have a virus, and says "You have not been a good user"Why? Because the person asked where Avatar 2 is showing nearby pic.twitter.com/X32vopXxQG— Jon Uleis (@MovingToTheSun) February 13, 2023 Boundaries will often be set by changing political winds: "The tech giant plans to release a series of short videos highlighting the techniques common to many misleading claims. The videos will appear as advertisements on platforms like Facebook, YouTube or TikTok in Germany. A similar campaign in India is also in the works. It’s an approach called prebunking, which involves teaching people how to spot false claims before they encounter them. The strategy is gaining support among researchers and tech companies. ... When catalyzed by algorithms, misleading claims can discourage people from getting vaccines, spread authoritarian propaganda, foment distrust in democratic institutions and spur violence." Stating facts about population subgroups will be limited in some ways to minimize perceived racism, sexism, or other fringe fake victim group benefits fund flows. Never trust Marxists who own multiple mansions. At the same time individual journalists can drop napalm on any person who shares too many politically incorrect facts. “The speed with which they can shuffle somebody into the Hitler of the month club.”Joe Rogan and @mtaibbi discuss how left wing media created a Elon Musk “bad now” narrative based on nothing. pic.twitter.com/IaHHTHCo1f— Mythinformed MKE (@MythinformedMKE) February 14, 2023 Some things are quickly labeled or debunked. Other things are blown out of proportion to scare and manipulate people: Dr. Ioannidis et. al. found that across 31 national seroprevalence studies in the pre-vaccine era, the median IFR was 0.0003% at 0-19 years, 0.003% at 20-29 years, 0.011% at 30-39 years, 0.035% at 40-49 years, 0.129% at 50-59 years, and 0.501% at 60-69 years. This comes out to 0.035% for those aged 0-59 and 0.095% for those aged 0-69. The covid response cycle sacrificed childhood development (and small businesses) to offer fake protections to unhealthy elderly people (and bountiful subsidies to large "essential" corporations). ‘Civilisation and barbarism are not different kinds of society. They are found – intertwined – whenever human beings come together.’ This is true whether the civilisation be Aztec or Covidian. A future historian may compare the superstition of the Aztec to those of the Covidian. The ridiculous masks, the ineffective lockdowns, the cult-like obedience to authority. It’s almost too perfect that Aztec nobility identified themselves by walking with a flower held under the nose. A lot of children had their childhoods destroyed by the idiotic lockdowns. And a lot of those children are now destroying the lives of other children: In the U.S., homicides committed by juveniles acting alone rose 30% in 2020 from a year earlier, while those committed by multiple juveniles increased 66%. The number of killings committed by children under 14 was the highest in two decades, according to the most recent federal data. Now we get to pile inflation and job insecurity on top of those headwinds to see more violence. The developmental damage (school closed, stressed out parents, hidden faces, less robust immune systems, limited social development) is hard to overstate: The problem with this is that the harm of performative art in this regard is not speculative, particularly in young children where language development is occurring and we know a huge percentage of said learning comes from facial expressions which of course a mask prevents from being seen. Every single person involved in this must face criminal sanction and prison for the deliberate harm inflicted upon young children without any evidence of benefit to anyone. When the harm is obvious and clear but the benefit dubious proceeding with a given action is both stupid and criminal. Some entities will claim their own statements are conspiracy theory, even when directly quoted: “If Russia invades . . . there will be no longer a Nord Stream 2. We will bring an end to it.” - President Joseph R. Biden In an age of deep fakes, confirmation bias driven fast social shares (filter bubble), legal threats, increased authenticity of impersonation technology, AI algorithms which sort & rewrite media, & secret censorship programs ... who do you trust? How are people informed when nation states offer free global internet access with a thumb on the scale of truth, even as aggregators block access to certain sources demanding payments? What is deemed Absolute Truth in one moment (WHO, March 2020: don't wear masks for COVID!) becomes falsity the next (WHO, April: Everyone wear masks!).In 2018, fact-checkers affirmed the truth that Lula was a "thief." In 2022, courts barred election material that asserted this. pic.twitter.com/XlIoTNtYhc— Glenn Greenwald (@ggreenwald) February 24, 2023 Lab leaks sure sound a lot like an outbreak of chocolatey goodness in Hershey, PA! Why is this story so important? It shows:1) unelected government officials have huge power to pursue dangerous agendas.2) rather than holding them accountable, corporate media cover for them.3) tech censorship ends up promoting rather than suppressing “disinformation.”— David Sacks (@DavidSacks) February 26, 2023 "The fact that protesters could be at once both the victims and perpetrators of misinformation simply shows how pernicious misinformation is in modern society." - Canadian Justice Paul Rouleau What is freedom? By 2016, however, the WEF types who’d gro Full Article sea A researcher explains why polls failed to predict a Trump victory By www.npr.org Published On :: Sat, 09 Nov 2024 07:58:22 -0500 NPR's Scott Simon speaks to Sunmin Kim, an assistant professor in Dartmouth College's sociology department, about the reliability of political polling leading up to elections. Full Article sea Jan 28: Humans understand ape gestures, wolves eat sea otters, 'Golden Boy' mummy and more… By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 27 Jan 2023 16:34:44 EST Polar pre-primate, Black in science update and domestication and taming. Full Article Radio/Quirks & Quarks sea Tech alone can't solve the housing crisis, says researcher By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 10 Dec 2021 17:29:30 EST A new crop of digital platforms aim to address housing equity, from improving mortgage terms to providing homelessness resources. But do technical answers work for social questions? Full Article Radio/Spark sea Social tech can be a lifeline and challenge to friendship, says researcher By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 04 Feb 2022 13:42:06 EST The evolutionary biology of friendship and how digital tech has shaped our fundamental sense of togetherness. Full Article Radio/Spark sea Digital data has an environmental cost. Calling it 'the cloud' conceals that, researcher says By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 04 Nov 2022 18:36:15 EDT Routine online activities like sharing photos to social media, uploading files to shared drives, or streaming TV shows produce a lot of digital data. And as that data production soars, so does the energy demand for storing and processing it. Full Article Radio/Spark sea Fascination is key to healthy urban living, says researcher By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 13 Jan 2023 16:16:39 EST Cookie-cutter condos, glass business towers, minimal green space — there's clear evidence that many urban spaces have negative impacts on our mental health. But does it have to be that way? Full Article Radio/Spark sea How are you dealing with high prices in the lead-up to gift-giving season? By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 02 Dec 2022 13:04:31 EST The rising cost of what sometimes seems to be everything has been one of the top stories this year. And the most expensive time of the year is now here. How have you gotten through the holidays in tough times previously, and what solutions have you come up with this year? Full Article Radio/Cross Country Checkup sea How is the flu season affecting you and your family? By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 09 Dec 2022 14:16:34 EST An early and severe flu season is starting to hit Canadian kids and Canadian hospitals. It's led to sickness, and in some cases death, among children. Are you or your kids getting the flu shot? Full Article Radio/Cross Country Checkup sea Vondelpark - Seabed By www.bbc.co.uk Published On :: Fri, 22 Mar 2013 00:00:00 +0000 Meticulous and soulful, this is exemplary electronic RnB. Full Article sea John Carpenter - Halloween II / Halloween III: Season of the Witch By www.bbc.co.uk Published On :: Wed, 21 Nov 2012 00:00:00 +0000 Essential listening for anyone fond of trouser-ruining horror scores. Full Article sea Retail payroll teams struggling with seasonal hiring, but too few are leveraging technology to alleviate the burden By www.logisticsit.com Published On :: Mon, 13 Nov 9200 17:31:40 +0000 With the holiday season fast approaching, retail payroll teams around the world are bracing for the strain of seasonal hiring. Full Article sea How I ship projects at big tech companies | sean goedecke By www.seangoedecke.com Published On :: 2024-11-13T08:28:11+00:00 Shipping is really hard and you have to make it your main priority Shipping doesn’t mean deploying code, it means making your leadership team happy Full Article sea tasmania australia boots - Google Search By www.google.com Published On :: 2024-11-13T08:31:15+00:00 Full Article sea space and times - Research Tools By spaceandtim.es Published On :: 2024-11-13T08:49:55+00:00 Full Article sea Reggae Party: Bob Marley- Stephen Marley- Seagram's Escapes Jamaican Me Happiness Collection By www.antimusic.com Published On :: Our look at reggae-related fun begins with a taste of some new adult beverages from Seagram's before moving into a new album from Stephen Marley on vinyl and an awesome highly-illustrated book about Bob Marley and the Wailers Full Article sea Charity Scam - YANG SEA FOOD LTD By www.cybertopcops.com Published On :: Fri, 04 Apr 2014 01:18:20 +0200 A woman from Cambodia who is dying scam you. Full Article sea Job Offer Scam - Job Bank: Employment, Job Search, Careers, Computer Jobs By www.cybertopcops.com Published On :: Mon, 21 Apr 2014 22:44:36 +0200 Cliff is offering you the job of shipping manager assistant. The problem is, there is no job, so there is no salary, only a scammer waiting to take your money. This is the worst type of scammer, taking money from unemployed people. Full Article sea SearchGPT versus Google: 5 zoekresultaten vergeleken By www.frankwatching.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 07:00:00 +0000 OpenAI’s nieuwe live zoekmachine ‘SearchGPT’, is onlangs gelanceerd voor betalende gebruikers. Sommige SEO-specialisten voelen hun businessmodel opnieuw op zijn grondvesten trillen. Is dit het begin van het einde voor traditionele SEO, of blijft Google Search met zijn 90%+ marktaandeel ongeslagen? Ik besloot de proef op de som te nemen en heb de organische zichtbaarheid in […] Full Article Alle artikelen Innovatie Artificial intelligence Google OpenAI SearchGPT SEO sea Mikaela Shiffrin wins 1st race after six-week injury layoff to lock up World Cup slalom season title By www.denverpost.com Published On :: Sun, 10 Mar 2024 20:01:03 +0000 Shiffrin made a triumphant comeback to the World Cup Sunday, dominating the season’s penultimate slalom for career win 96 and locking up her record-equaling eighth season title in the discipline. Full Article Latest Headlines Skiing Sports Mikaela Shiffrin Winter Sports sea With marijuana at a new level of scrutiny, here’s what the research says By www.denverpost.com Published On :: Tue, 03 Sep 2024 10:00:08 +0000 Pot brings lots of tax money into states like Illinois, but its societal impact continues to be examined at the state and federal levels. Full Article Business Health Latest Headlines Marijuana News Politics sea TB reclaims title of deadliest infectious disease. That's an 'outrage' says WHO By www.capradio.org Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 18:19:00 GMT By Fran Kritz, NPR The ancient scourge of tuberculosis for years was the deadliest infectious disease. Then SARS-CoV-2 came along and grabbed the notorious title of #1 killer: In 2020, COVID-19 was responsible for 3.5 million deaths worldwide vs 1.5 million for TB.The 2024 Global Tuberculosis Report, published last week by the World Health Organization, puts TB back in the top slot with 1.25 million deaths in 2023 compared to 320,000 COVID-19 deaths. There's also been an increase of hundreds of thousands of new TB cases in 2023 compared to the year prior. The 1.25 million TB deaths in 2023 is down from 2022’s number of 1.32 million (which that year was second to the COVID toll). But it's still indefensibly high, say public health leaders. “The fact that TB still kills and sickens so many people is an outrage, when we have the tools to prevent it, detect it and treat it,” said Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO director-general, in a statement issued on October 29. According to the report, approximately 8.2 million people were newly diagnosed with TB in 2023 — the highest number since WHO began global TB monitoring in 1995 and a “notable increase” from 7.5 million people newly diagnosed in 2022. TB sleuths are trying to figure out the reasons behind the increase. Anand Date, global TB branch chief at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, says population growth may account for the increase in cases last year -- and that it may take until the 2024 to find out if that is so or if the leap in 2023 reflects an undercount of annual TB totals during the pandemic. “Disruptions to TB programs during the height of the pandemic led to more people going undiagnosed and untreated for TB. [And] guidance to shelter in place may have also limited the spread of TB, says Yogan Pillay, who heads efforts to improve TB program delivery at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (which is a funder of NPR and this blog). COVID-19 did trigger a new setback in the effort to control TB. But most of the reasons the infection persists are frustratingly well-known, says Lucica Ditiu, executive director of the Stop TB Partnership. There's too little money for research, treatment. and patient care needs. And there's stigma that can keep the most common victims of TB, impoverished people including migrants and sex workers, from seeking help or being offered treatment. In addition, health conditions like malnutrition, diabetes and smoking that can exacerbate TB and keep medications from being fully effective, says Luke Davis, a TB and HIV specialist at the Yale School of Public Health. “TB is unusual,” says Davis, in that most people who are exposed to the bacteria won’t progress to infectious TB. Only about 10% do, and they are usually among the world’s poorest people often with poor health to begin with, which exacerbates their condition.” So what's the solution? And that brings us to the Tedros point. The world knows how to vanquish TB — but is not doing a good job. Money reigns as perhaps the biggest obstacle to conquering tuberculosis. A spokesperson for WHO tells NPR: “Compared with global funding targets for TB set at the 2023 U.N. high-level meeting on TB, there are large funding shortfalls for TB research as well as prevention, detection and treatment services. To close these gaps, more funding is needed from both domestic sources in the countries most impacted by TB and from international donors.” Global funding for TB prevention and care decreased in 2023 from $6 billion in the three previous years to $5.7 billion and remains far below the yearly target of $22 billion, according to WHO. What would more money bring? WHO cites expanded rapid diagnostic testing as critical. Then treatment can start sooner. And people wouldn’t have to travel long distances to a clinic then wait for days for the results. Increased funding would also help reimburse families for lost wages and food and travel expenses incurred as they go for treatment. Those costs keep some patients and their families from seeking care. The WHO report and other investigations also say that countries burdened by TB also have to step up and spend more money on prevention, diagnosis and treatment. A report by MSF/Doctors Without Borders published last month, for example, found that, only 5 out of 14 countries have adapted their guidelines — based on WHO recommendations -- to initiate TB treatment in children when symptoms strongly indicate TB disease, even if bacteriological tests are negative. And increased funding would speed up the pace of research says the CDC’s Date. Funding for TB research has stagnated at around $1 billion per year, constraining progress, according to WHO. The target at the U.N. meeting: $5 billion per year by 2027. “The world also has the most promising R&D pipeline of new TB tools in decades,” says Pillay. “What’s needed now is greater investment to deliver on the promise of that pipeline and ensure patients and those at risk of TB have affordable and equitable access to these tools when they are available.” Vaccines in the works Pillay says there are more than a dozen TB vaccine candidates in clinical trials, including one whose late stage (stage 3) clinical trial is sponsored by the Gates Medical Research Institute. The trial began recruiting patients last March. That vaccine candidate is called M72/AS01E and if proven effective would be the first new TB vaccine in 100 years. The lone TB vaccine available now is not predictably effective in adults, and can cause a false positive result on TB skin tests. But even an effective vaccine won’t do that much good if there aren’t funds to purchase it for countries impacted by TB. Janeen Madan Keller, deputy director of the Global Health Policy Program at the Center for Global Development, based in Washington, D.C., says that while Gavi, The Vaccine Alliance, pays for [a variety of] vaccines in some of the poorest countries such as Afghanistan, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, some countries with high rates of TB are middle income countries, like Indonesia, and no longer eligible for support. Ahead of a TB vaccine’s approval, says Keller, there needs to be a better match of policy and funding. “Often it seems that when we find a way to help vanquish TB,” says Lucica Ditiu, “we also find another barrier.” Fran Kritz is a health policy reporter based in Washington, D.C., and a regular contributor to NPR. She also reports for the Washington Post and Verywell Health. Find her on X: @fkritz Full Article sea Denver Broncos legend booted from “Masked Singer” on Season 12 premiere By www.denverpost.com Published On :: Thu, 26 Sep 2024 19:48:35 +0000 Judge Ken Jeong correctly guessed the person inside the Leaf Sheep costume. Full Article Colorado News Denver Broncos Entertainment Latest Headlines News NFL Sports The Know Things To Do TV Streaming broncos celebrity football Fox John Elway More Broncos News television TV Programming «1..246 47 48..62..92..122..152..182..212..242..272296» Recent Trending The Finish Line: Sealants The First Sealer to Give a Beautiful, Luxurious Appearance Season’s Reelings: Your 2024 Holiday Movie Guide What types of measures would Robert F. Kennedy Jr. take to fight chronic disease? Sylvester Cancer Researchers Share Findings in Oral Presentations at the ASH 2024 Annual Meeting & Exposition - Tip Sheet New Award Advances Sanders-Brown Director's Research on Inflammation's Role in Alzheimer's Sylvester Cancer Tip Sheet: Researchers Present Posters at the 66th ASH Annual Meeting & Exposition Researchers Reveal Why a Key Tuberculosis Drug Works Against Resistant Strains McMaster University Researchers Uncover Potential Treatment for Rare Genetic Disorders Argonne Researchers Highlight Breakthroughs in Supercomputing and AI at SC24 Researchers Reveal Why a Key Tuberculosis Drug Works Against Resistant Strains McMaster University Researchers Uncover Potential Treatment for Rare Genetic Disorders Korean American Dave Min Wins Congressional Seat Scurrying roaches help researchers steady staggering robots Researchers identify fundamental properties of cells that affect how tissue structures form Subscribe To Our Newsletter
sea A researcher explains why polls failed to predict a Trump victory By www.npr.org Published On :: Sat, 09 Nov 2024 07:58:22 -0500 NPR's Scott Simon speaks to Sunmin Kim, an assistant professor in Dartmouth College's sociology department, about the reliability of political polling leading up to elections. Full Article
sea Jan 28: Humans understand ape gestures, wolves eat sea otters, 'Golden Boy' mummy and more… By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 27 Jan 2023 16:34:44 EST Polar pre-primate, Black in science update and domestication and taming. Full Article Radio/Quirks & Quarks
sea Tech alone can't solve the housing crisis, says researcher By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 10 Dec 2021 17:29:30 EST A new crop of digital platforms aim to address housing equity, from improving mortgage terms to providing homelessness resources. But do technical answers work for social questions? Full Article Radio/Spark
sea Social tech can be a lifeline and challenge to friendship, says researcher By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 04 Feb 2022 13:42:06 EST The evolutionary biology of friendship and how digital tech has shaped our fundamental sense of togetherness. Full Article Radio/Spark
sea Digital data has an environmental cost. Calling it 'the cloud' conceals that, researcher says By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 04 Nov 2022 18:36:15 EDT Routine online activities like sharing photos to social media, uploading files to shared drives, or streaming TV shows produce a lot of digital data. And as that data production soars, so does the energy demand for storing and processing it. Full Article Radio/Spark
sea Fascination is key to healthy urban living, says researcher By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 13 Jan 2023 16:16:39 EST Cookie-cutter condos, glass business towers, minimal green space — there's clear evidence that many urban spaces have negative impacts on our mental health. But does it have to be that way? Full Article Radio/Spark
sea How are you dealing with high prices in the lead-up to gift-giving season? By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 02 Dec 2022 13:04:31 EST The rising cost of what sometimes seems to be everything has been one of the top stories this year. And the most expensive time of the year is now here. How have you gotten through the holidays in tough times previously, and what solutions have you come up with this year? Full Article Radio/Cross Country Checkup
sea How is the flu season affecting you and your family? By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 09 Dec 2022 14:16:34 EST An early and severe flu season is starting to hit Canadian kids and Canadian hospitals. It's led to sickness, and in some cases death, among children. Are you or your kids getting the flu shot? Full Article Radio/Cross Country Checkup
sea Vondelpark - Seabed By www.bbc.co.uk Published On :: Fri, 22 Mar 2013 00:00:00 +0000 Meticulous and soulful, this is exemplary electronic RnB. Full Article
sea John Carpenter - Halloween II / Halloween III: Season of the Witch By www.bbc.co.uk Published On :: Wed, 21 Nov 2012 00:00:00 +0000 Essential listening for anyone fond of trouser-ruining horror scores. Full Article
sea Retail payroll teams struggling with seasonal hiring, but too few are leveraging technology to alleviate the burden By www.logisticsit.com Published On :: Mon, 13 Nov 9200 17:31:40 +0000 With the holiday season fast approaching, retail payroll teams around the world are bracing for the strain of seasonal hiring. Full Article
sea How I ship projects at big tech companies | sean goedecke By www.seangoedecke.com Published On :: 2024-11-13T08:28:11+00:00 Shipping is really hard and you have to make it your main priority Shipping doesn’t mean deploying code, it means making your leadership team happy Full Article
sea tasmania australia boots - Google Search By www.google.com Published On :: 2024-11-13T08:31:15+00:00 Full Article
sea space and times - Research Tools By spaceandtim.es Published On :: 2024-11-13T08:49:55+00:00 Full Article
sea Reggae Party: Bob Marley- Stephen Marley- Seagram's Escapes Jamaican Me Happiness Collection By www.antimusic.com Published On :: Our look at reggae-related fun begins with a taste of some new adult beverages from Seagram's before moving into a new album from Stephen Marley on vinyl and an awesome highly-illustrated book about Bob Marley and the Wailers Full Article
sea Charity Scam - YANG SEA FOOD LTD By www.cybertopcops.com Published On :: Fri, 04 Apr 2014 01:18:20 +0200 A woman from Cambodia who is dying scam you. Full Article
sea Job Offer Scam - Job Bank: Employment, Job Search, Careers, Computer Jobs By www.cybertopcops.com Published On :: Mon, 21 Apr 2014 22:44:36 +0200 Cliff is offering you the job of shipping manager assistant. The problem is, there is no job, so there is no salary, only a scammer waiting to take your money. This is the worst type of scammer, taking money from unemployed people. Full Article
sea SearchGPT versus Google: 5 zoekresultaten vergeleken By www.frankwatching.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 07:00:00 +0000 OpenAI’s nieuwe live zoekmachine ‘SearchGPT’, is onlangs gelanceerd voor betalende gebruikers. Sommige SEO-specialisten voelen hun businessmodel opnieuw op zijn grondvesten trillen. Is dit het begin van het einde voor traditionele SEO, of blijft Google Search met zijn 90%+ marktaandeel ongeslagen? Ik besloot de proef op de som te nemen en heb de organische zichtbaarheid in […] Full Article Alle artikelen Innovatie Artificial intelligence Google OpenAI SearchGPT SEO
sea Mikaela Shiffrin wins 1st race after six-week injury layoff to lock up World Cup slalom season title By www.denverpost.com Published On :: Sun, 10 Mar 2024 20:01:03 +0000 Shiffrin made a triumphant comeback to the World Cup Sunday, dominating the season’s penultimate slalom for career win 96 and locking up her record-equaling eighth season title in the discipline. Full Article Latest Headlines Skiing Sports Mikaela Shiffrin Winter Sports
sea With marijuana at a new level of scrutiny, here’s what the research says By www.denverpost.com Published On :: Tue, 03 Sep 2024 10:00:08 +0000 Pot brings lots of tax money into states like Illinois, but its societal impact continues to be examined at the state and federal levels. Full Article Business Health Latest Headlines Marijuana News Politics
sea TB reclaims title of deadliest infectious disease. That's an 'outrage' says WHO By www.capradio.org Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 18:19:00 GMT By Fran Kritz, NPR The ancient scourge of tuberculosis for years was the deadliest infectious disease. Then SARS-CoV-2 came along and grabbed the notorious title of #1 killer: In 2020, COVID-19 was responsible for 3.5 million deaths worldwide vs 1.5 million for TB.The 2024 Global Tuberculosis Report, published last week by the World Health Organization, puts TB back in the top slot with 1.25 million deaths in 2023 compared to 320,000 COVID-19 deaths. There's also been an increase of hundreds of thousands of new TB cases in 2023 compared to the year prior. The 1.25 million TB deaths in 2023 is down from 2022’s number of 1.32 million (which that year was second to the COVID toll). But it's still indefensibly high, say public health leaders. “The fact that TB still kills and sickens so many people is an outrage, when we have the tools to prevent it, detect it and treat it,” said Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO director-general, in a statement issued on October 29. According to the report, approximately 8.2 million people were newly diagnosed with TB in 2023 — the highest number since WHO began global TB monitoring in 1995 and a “notable increase” from 7.5 million people newly diagnosed in 2022. TB sleuths are trying to figure out the reasons behind the increase. Anand Date, global TB branch chief at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, says population growth may account for the increase in cases last year -- and that it may take until the 2024 to find out if that is so or if the leap in 2023 reflects an undercount of annual TB totals during the pandemic. “Disruptions to TB programs during the height of the pandemic led to more people going undiagnosed and untreated for TB. [And] guidance to shelter in place may have also limited the spread of TB, says Yogan Pillay, who heads efforts to improve TB program delivery at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (which is a funder of NPR and this blog). COVID-19 did trigger a new setback in the effort to control TB. But most of the reasons the infection persists are frustratingly well-known, says Lucica Ditiu, executive director of the Stop TB Partnership. There's too little money for research, treatment. and patient care needs. And there's stigma that can keep the most common victims of TB, impoverished people including migrants and sex workers, from seeking help or being offered treatment. In addition, health conditions like malnutrition, diabetes and smoking that can exacerbate TB and keep medications from being fully effective, says Luke Davis, a TB and HIV specialist at the Yale School of Public Health. “TB is unusual,” says Davis, in that most people who are exposed to the bacteria won’t progress to infectious TB. Only about 10% do, and they are usually among the world’s poorest people often with poor health to begin with, which exacerbates their condition.” So what's the solution? And that brings us to the Tedros point. The world knows how to vanquish TB — but is not doing a good job. Money reigns as perhaps the biggest obstacle to conquering tuberculosis. A spokesperson for WHO tells NPR: “Compared with global funding targets for TB set at the 2023 U.N. high-level meeting on TB, there are large funding shortfalls for TB research as well as prevention, detection and treatment services. To close these gaps, more funding is needed from both domestic sources in the countries most impacted by TB and from international donors.” Global funding for TB prevention and care decreased in 2023 from $6 billion in the three previous years to $5.7 billion and remains far below the yearly target of $22 billion, according to WHO. What would more money bring? WHO cites expanded rapid diagnostic testing as critical. Then treatment can start sooner. And people wouldn’t have to travel long distances to a clinic then wait for days for the results. Increased funding would also help reimburse families for lost wages and food and travel expenses incurred as they go for treatment. Those costs keep some patients and their families from seeking care. The WHO report and other investigations also say that countries burdened by TB also have to step up and spend more money on prevention, diagnosis and treatment. A report by MSF/Doctors Without Borders published last month, for example, found that, only 5 out of 14 countries have adapted their guidelines — based on WHO recommendations -- to initiate TB treatment in children when symptoms strongly indicate TB disease, even if bacteriological tests are negative. And increased funding would speed up the pace of research says the CDC’s Date. Funding for TB research has stagnated at around $1 billion per year, constraining progress, according to WHO. The target at the U.N. meeting: $5 billion per year by 2027. “The world also has the most promising R&D pipeline of new TB tools in decades,” says Pillay. “What’s needed now is greater investment to deliver on the promise of that pipeline and ensure patients and those at risk of TB have affordable and equitable access to these tools when they are available.” Vaccines in the works Pillay says there are more than a dozen TB vaccine candidates in clinical trials, including one whose late stage (stage 3) clinical trial is sponsored by the Gates Medical Research Institute. The trial began recruiting patients last March. That vaccine candidate is called M72/AS01E and if proven effective would be the first new TB vaccine in 100 years. The lone TB vaccine available now is not predictably effective in adults, and can cause a false positive result on TB skin tests. But even an effective vaccine won’t do that much good if there aren’t funds to purchase it for countries impacted by TB. Janeen Madan Keller, deputy director of the Global Health Policy Program at the Center for Global Development, based in Washington, D.C., says that while Gavi, The Vaccine Alliance, pays for [a variety of] vaccines in some of the poorest countries such as Afghanistan, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, some countries with high rates of TB are middle income countries, like Indonesia, and no longer eligible for support. Ahead of a TB vaccine’s approval, says Keller, there needs to be a better match of policy and funding. “Often it seems that when we find a way to help vanquish TB,” says Lucica Ditiu, “we also find another barrier.” Fran Kritz is a health policy reporter based in Washington, D.C., and a regular contributor to NPR. She also reports for the Washington Post and Verywell Health. Find her on X: @fkritz Full Article
sea Denver Broncos legend booted from “Masked Singer” on Season 12 premiere By www.denverpost.com Published On :: Thu, 26 Sep 2024 19:48:35 +0000 Judge Ken Jeong correctly guessed the person inside the Leaf Sheep costume. Full Article Colorado News Denver Broncos Entertainment Latest Headlines News NFL Sports The Know Things To Do TV Streaming broncos celebrity football Fox John Elway More Broncos News television TV Programming