ai First trailer for HBO’s Lovecraft Country blends eldritch horrors and racism By arstechnica.com Published On :: Sat, 02 May 2020 01:04:37 +0000 Jonathan Majors plays Atticus Black, who takes a road trip to find his missing father. Full Article Gaming & Culture entertainment HBO jordan peele Lovecraft Country television Trailers
ai Boots on the Moon! Netflix drops official Space Force trailer By arstechnica.com Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 18:41:33 +0000 Think Veep meets The Office and Parks and Recreation. Full Article Gaming & Culture entertainment Netflix sitcoms space force Steve Carell streaming television television Trailers
ai Krabi, 2562 - Trailer By uk.movies.yahoo.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 10:54:08 GMT In the town of Krabi, a popular tourist destination in southern Thailand, the pre-historic, the recent past and the contemporary capitalist world awkwardly collide. MyMovies, trailer, 2020, Drama, Ben Rivers, Anocha Suwichakornpong Full Article
ai Kevin Spacey breaks silence over sex assault claims to compare industry shunning to coronavirus job losses By uk.movies.yahoo.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 16:10:13 GMT Actor Kevin Spacey has broken his silence over sex assault allegations, comparing being shunned by the film industry to those who are out of work as a result of the coronavirus crisis. The 60-year-old American Beauty star has not appeared in a professional movie or series since accusations of abuse were made by several men. "I don't think it will come as a surprise for anyone to say that my world completely changed in the fall of 2017,” he said in comments made during an interview for the German business conference Bits & Pretzels podcast. “My job, many of my relationships, my standing in my own industry were all gone in just a matter of hours.” The former House of Cards lead, who was dropped by the show after allegations surfaced, has largely kept a low profile since the allegations were made. He was also removed from the film All the Money in the World, which had to be reshot with actor Christopher Plummer. Spacey has always denied the claims, several of which date back several decades. “While we may have found ourselves in similar situations, albeit for very different reasons and circumstances, I still believe that some of the emotional struggles are very much the same," he said. “And so I do have empathy for what it feels like to suddenly be told that you can't go back to work or that you might lose your job and that it's a situation that you have absolutely no control over.” At the end of the podcast interview, Spacey added: “I was so busy defining myself by what I did or what I was trying to do, that when it all stopped I had no idea what to do next. All I knew how to do was act, I was born to do it. “I don’t want to sugarcoat this devastating time that we’re in, I am hoping that I can encourage you to see an opportunity in all of this and turn this into a positive.” Full Article
ai Dwayne Johnson, Emily Blunt Team Up for Superhero Film ‘Ball and Chain’ By uk.movies.yahoo.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 02:49:47 GMT Dwayne Johnson and Emily Blunt are re-teaming on the superhero movie "Ball and Chain" following their collaboration on "Jungle Cruise." The project is being shopped among studios, including Netflix, but no distribution deal has closed. "Ball and Chain" is being written by Oscar nominee Emily V. Gordon and is an adaptation of the '90s comic […] Full Article
ai Ricky Gervais signs overall deal with Netflix as 'After Life' renewed for third season By uk.movies.yahoo.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 08:45:03 GMT Gervais signed a new contract which will see him making new scripted shows as well as stand-up comedy specials. Full Article
ai Revenge - Limited Edition Blu-ray Trailer By uk.movies.yahoo.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 10:12:08 GMT A white-knuckle tale of transgression and transformation, 'Revenge' gloriously blurs the lines of vengeance and survival while simultaneously delivering a ferocious dissection of gender and genre. MyMovies, trailer, 2020, Suspense, Coralie Fargeat, Kevin Janssens, Matilda Lutz Full Article
ai The Whistlers - Trailer By uk.movies.yahoo.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 10:13:12 GMT Drawn into a high stakes heist by the glamorous and enigmatic Gilda, Cristi finds himself travelling to a Spanish island where he has to learn the local dialect - a secret whistling language - to pull off the biggest deal of his life. MyMovies, trailer, 2020, Comedy, Crime, Corneliu Porumboiu, Vlad Ivanov, Catrinel Marlon, Rodica Lazar Full Article
ai The Batman release date, cast, villains, and everything else you need to know By uk.movies.yahoo.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 11:10:32 GMT Get ready for The Batman with our recap of the latest news Full Article
ai Stream 'The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society' on VE Day to raise money for the NHS By uk.movies.yahoo.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 12:58:01 GMT Celebrate VE Day with Mike Newell's 2018 WW2 film. Full Article
ai 'Flash Gordon' is getting a 4K remaster for 40th anniversary: See new trailer and artwork By uk.movies.yahoo.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 20:34:42 GMT Gordon's alive! And he looks better than ever. Full Article
ai Pete Davidson needs to sort his life out in first trailer for 'The King of Staten Island' By uk.movies.yahoo.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 08:51:55 GMT From 'Saturday Night Live' to the big screen, Pete Davidson could become Judd Apatow's next comedy megastar. Full Article
ai Get moving, your brain will love you for it By Published On :: Tue, 14 Apr 2020 12:39:05 -0400 It’s amazing what happens if you just get out there, writes Ernie Schramayr. Full Article Opinion Living Opinion/Columns Living/Health
ai Hipadeedooda! Here’s a way to help with your hip pain By Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 10:32:04 -0400 Karen Cumming is finding a way to deal with delayed hip surgery Full Article Community Opinion Living Opinion/Columns Living/Health Community/Wellness Opinion/Contributed
ai Pulling back the curtain on The Undertaker By www.espn.com Published On :: Thu, 7 May 2020 18:09:36 EST Over the course of his 30-year WWE career, Mark Calaway rarely let the world see the man behind "The Undertaker" -- until he decided to open his life to a camera crew. Full Article
ai USWNT lawsuit versus U.S. Soccer explained By www.espn.com Published On :: Mon, 9 Mar 2020 18:17:59 EST The USWNT has been in an ongoing battle with the USSF since filing a pay-equity lawsuit last year. We break down what's at stake for both sides. Full Article
ai Saints cut RG Warford after 3 Pro Bowl seasons By www.espn.com Published On :: Fri, 8 May 2020 17:33:39 EST Despite being named a Pro Bowler each of the past three seasons, right guard Larry Warford was cut by the Saints on Friday. Full Article
ai Sidewalk Labs pulls out of Toronto smart city project after 3 years, citing ‘unprecedented economic uncertainty’ By business.financialpost.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 22:26:04 +0000 'It has become too difficult to make the 12-acre project financially viable' Full Article Innovation Sidewalk Labs Waterfront Toronto
ai Adverts which claim IV drips can help fight coronavirus banned by watchdog By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-21T13:56:00Z No treatments for the coronavirus have yet been approved, meaning companies cannot make medical claims about their products Full Article
ai 'We don't do apart': Elderly couple who fought coronavirus together in hospital heap praise on NHS staff By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-22T10:42:56Z 'We've never been apart for sixty plus years, we don't do apart,' says Sidney Moore Full Article
ai Poorer expectant mums lose over £4,000 through ‘unfair’ anomaly in benefits By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-04-25T15:22:01Z System treats maternity allowance as unpaid income, skewing the amount of universal credit paid outPregnant women on the lowest incomes are being denied vital financial support during the Covid-19 crisis, according to unions and women’s support groups, who are calling for urgent reforms to universal credit.An anomaly in the way universal credit differentiates between pregnant earners has created an unfair system, it is argued. Universal credit treats maternity allowance, which is paid to the lowest-earning women and those who are self-employed, as “unearned income”, which means it is deducted from their benefit payments. Continue reading... Full Article Universal credit Pregnancy Employee benefits Maternity & paternity rights Coronavirus outbreak Benefits UK news Health & wellbeing
ai Patterns of pain: what Covid-19 can teach us about how to be human By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-07T05:00:26Z We can expect psychological difficulties to follow as we come out of lockdown. But we have an opportunity to remake our relationship with our bodies, and the social body we belong to. By Susie OrbachWhen lockdown started, I was confused by bodies on television. Why weren’t they socially distancing? Didn’t they know not to be so close? The injunction to be separate was unfamiliar and irregular, and for me, self-isolating alone, following this government directive was peculiar. It made watching dramas and programmes produced under normal filming conditions feel jarring.Seven weeks in, the disjuncture has passed. I, like all of us, am accommodating to multiple corporeal realities: bodies alone, bodies distant, bodies in the park to be avoided, bodies of disobedient youths hanging out in groups, bodies in lines outside shops, bodies and voices flattened on screens and above all, bodies of dead health workers and carers. Black bodies, brown bodies. Working-class bodies. Bodies not normally praised, now being celebrated. Continue reading... Full Article Body image Psychiatry Health Coronavirus outbreak Psychology Health & wellbeing
ai DOJ Will Drop Case Against Ex-Trump Adviser Michael Flynn By www.npr.org Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 05:04:00 -0400 After months of wrangling following the Russia probe, prosecutors will not go ahead with the case against Michael Flynn based on the former national security adviser's false statements to the FBI. Full Article
ai The Biden Campaign Is Trying To Reach Voters Virtually By www.npr.org Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 16:01:00 -0400 President Trump and Vice President Pence have made official visits to battleground states this week, while the Biden campaign tries new ways to reach voters in key states virtually. Full Article
ai Civilian Coronavirus Corps Aims To Get Pennsylvania Back To Work By www.npr.org Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 16:45:00 -0400 Gov. Tom Wolf hopes a New Deal-inspired plan will help get the state's more than 1.7 million unemployed residents working again. Full Article
ai Week In Politics: U.S. Jobs Report, DOJ Drops Criminal Case Against Michael Flynn By www.npr.org Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 07:59:00 -0400 NPR's Ron Elving talks about the historic U.S. unemployment rate, and the Justice Department's move to drop its criminal case against former national security adviser Michael Flynn. Full Article
ai Mike Pence aide tests positive for coronavirus, 2nd case in White House complex By globalnews.ca Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 16:53:04 +0000 The White House was moving to shore up its protection protocols to protect the nation's political leaders. Full Article Health Politics World 2 coronavirus cases in White House Canada Coronavirus Coronavirus Coronavirus Cases Coronavirus In Canada coronavirus news coronavirus update COVID-19 covid-19 canada covid-19 news Mike Pence Mike Pence aide tests positive for coronavirus Pence aide tests positive for coronavirus White House White House COVID-19 cases
ai Coronavirus: Trudeau promises more COVID-19 aid to come from Ottawa By globalnews.ca Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 11:07:06 +0000 Justin Trudeau says there will be more support from the federal government to help certain sectors of the economy reeling from the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Full Article Canada Politics Canada Coronavirus Coronavirus Coronavirus Cases Coronavirus In Canada coronavirus Justin Trudeau coronavirus news coronavirus update COVID-19 covid-19 canada covid-19 news Justin Trudeau Justin Trudeau coronavirus
ai Canada backs American-led effort for Taiwan at World Health Organization By globalnews.ca Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 11:54:24 +0000 Canada has backed an American-led effort to allow Taiwan to be granted observer status at the World Health Organization because of its early success in containing COVID-19. Full Article Canada Politics World Canada Coronavirus Coronavirus Coronavirus Cases Coronavirus In Canada coronavirus news coronavirus update COVID-19 covid-19 canada covid-19 news Taiwan Taiwan Coronavirus WHO World Health Organization
ai Proposed class-action lawsuit filed against N.S. mass shooter's estate on behalf of families By atlantic.ctvnews.ca Published On :: Fri, 8 May 2020 11:52:00 -0400 A proposed class-action lawsuit has been filed against the estate of the perpetrator of Canada’s worst mass shooting, which left 22 people dead in several Nova Scotia communities last month. Full Article
ai Sandra Bullock's Daughter Laila Makes Rare Appearance While Surprising Coronavirus Nurse By www.eonline.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 20:40:00 GMT As Jada Pinkett Smith suggested, "Grab a tissue!" If you needed a reason to cry happy tears, look no further than the newly released Mother's Day episode of the star's... Full Article
ai These Services Deliver Wine & Spirits Straight to Your Doorstep By www.eonline.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 22:30:00 GMT We love these products, and we hope you do too. E! has affiliate relationships, so we may get a small share of the revenue from your purchases. Items are sold by the retailer, not E!. One... Full Article
ai Canadian Forces determining how to raise helicopter that crashed By www.ctvnews.ca Published On :: Thu, 7 May 2020 11:20:00 -0400 The Canadian military is still determining how to raise the wreckage of a military helicopter that crashed into the Mediterranean Sea last week, Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan said Thursday. Full Article
ai 'You deserve a raise': PM says deal reached to top up wages for essential COVID-19 workers By www.ctvnews.ca Published On :: Thu, 7 May 2020 05:09:00 -0400 Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says that an agreement has been reached with all provinces and territories to top up the wages of some essential front-line workers including those in long-term care facilities where COVID-19 has spread among both residents and staff, with deadly impact. This comes as the military deployment to long-term care homes is being expanded. Full Article
ai Peter MacKay suggests Magnitsky Act should be used against China for COVID-19 By www.ctvnews.ca Published On :: Fri, 8 May 2020 04:33:00 -0400 Conservative leadership hopeful Peter MacKay is calling for use of the Magnitsky Act if specific individuals in China can be identified as having suppressed information related to COVID-19. Full Article
ai Prime minister promises more pandemic aid to come from Ottawa By www.ctvnews.ca Published On :: Sat, 9 May 2020 09:48:00 -0400 Justin Trudeau says there will be more support from the federal government to help certain sectors of the economy reeling from the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Full Article
ai Boris Johnson discharged from hospital as fiancee Carrie Symonds hails 'magnificent' NHS and reveals 'dark times' during PM's treatment By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-12T12:29:00Z Follow our live coronavirus updates HERE Fiancee Carrie Symonds said: "There were times last week that were very dark indeed" Full Article
ai Anti-Semitism campaigners accuse Jeremy Corbyn allies of 'smearing' whistleblowers as internal probe finds 'no evidence' By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-12T18:40:00Z Jeremy Corbyn's allies have been accused of using a report to "smear whistleblowers" and "discredit allegations" of anti-Semitism in the Labour Party during his tenure. Full Article
ai Britain will stay in lockdown until coronavirus vaccine is found, health minister says By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-15T20:21:00Z Follow our live coronavirus updates here Full Article
ai Number 10 removes China data from daily press briefing charts amid suspicions over 'inaccurate' figures By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-25T09:11:00Z The new group, modelled on the pro-Brexit European Research Group that scrutinised Theresa May's fated Brexit deal, will assess China's handling of the outbreak and broader security concerns. Full Article
ai Labour frontbench MP blasted 'after claiming Tories plot to murder British citizens' By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-26T14:32:04Z Full Article
ai Boris Johnson's rollercoaster month as he returns to work hours after son's birth to lead war against Covid-19 By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-29T13:46:00Z The PM has had two life-changing events in just three weeks - a new family and a brush with death Full Article
ai Michael Gove labels UK decision not to extend Brexit transition beyond 2020 'plain prudence' By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-04T14:43:00Z Cabinet Office minister says Government does not want the UK to continue with its 'European Union-lite membership' beyond December 2020 Full Article
ai Rory Stewart quits race to become London Mayor saying coronavirus crisis made it 'impossible' to campaign By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-06T08:06:00Z EXCLUSIVE: Independent candidate withdraws after difficult decision over job 'I really, really dreamed of' Full Article
ai PMQs verdict: Boris Johnson's political genius meets Keir Starmer's forensic brilliance in long-awaited Commons duel By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-06T13:48:00Z Full Article
ai Professor Neil Ferguson's behaviour 'plainly disappointing' but no action will be taken, Scotland Yard says By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-06T10:39:00Z Scotland Yard has said Professor Neil Ferguson's behaviour is "plainly disappointing" but officers do not intend to take any further action. Full Article
ai Government fails to hit 100,000 coronavirus test target for fifth day despite Boris Johnson's vow for double By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-07T15:42:00Z The Government has failed to meet its 100,000 coronavirus daily testing target for the fifth day running as criticism mounts on ministers to bolster supplies. Full Article
ai Cardi B Tells Bernie Sanders His Nails 'Look Quarantine' By dose.ca Published On :: Wed, 15 Apr 2020 12:51:23 +0000 Cardi B invited Bernie Sanders to join her on Instagram Live last night to talk politics, coronavirus and manicures. Full Article Non classé Bernie Sanders cardi b
ai Quarantine Love is in the Air in Justin Bieber and Ariana Grande’s "Stuck With U" Video By dose.ca Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 21:10:46 +0000 Justin Bieber and Ariana Grande’s new video for “Stuck With U” features a variety of celebs and their significant others – and also confirms a few rumoured relationships. Full Article Music ariana grande Ashton Kutcher Demi Lovato Gwyneth Paltrow Justin Bieber kylie jenner
ai Why False Claims About COVID-19 Refuse to Die - Issue 84: Outbreak By nautil.us Published On :: Thu, 16 Apr 2020 01:00:00 +0000 Early in the morning on April 5, 2020, an article appeared on the website Medium with the title “Covid-19 had us all fooled, but now we might have finally found its secret.” The article claimed that the pathology of COVID-19 was completely different from what public health authorities, such as the World Health Organization, had previously described. According to the author, COVID-19 strips the body’s hemoglobin of iron, preventing red blood cells from delivering oxygen and damaging the lungs in the process. It also claimed to explain why hydroxychloroquine, an experimental treatment often hyped by President Trump, should be effective.The article was published under a pseudonym—libertymavenstock—but the associated account was linked to a Chicagoland man working in finance, with no medical expertise. (His father is a retired M.D., and in a follow-up note posted on a blog called “Small Dead Animals,” the author claimed that the original article was a collaboration between the two of them.) Although it was not cited, the claims were apparently based on a single scientific article that has not yet undergone peer-review or been accepted for publication, along with “anecdotal evidence” scraped from social media.1While Medium allows anyone to post on their site and does not attempt to fact-check content, this article remained up for less than 24 hours before it was removed for violating Medium’s COVID-19 content policy. Removing the article, though, has not stopped it from making a splash. The original text continues to circulate widely on social media, with users tweeting or sharing versions archived by the Wayback Machine and re-published by a right-wing blog. As of April 12, the article had been tweeted thousands of times.There is a pandemic of misinformation about COVID-19 spreading on social media sites. Some of this misinformation takes well-understood forms: baseless rumors, intentional disinformation, and conspiracy theories. But much of it seems to have a different character. In recent months, claims with some scientific legitimacy have spread so far, so fast, that even if it later becomes clear they are false or unfounded, they cannot be laid to rest. Instead, they become information zombies, continuing to shamble on long after they should be dead.POOR STANDARD: The antiviral drug hydroxychloroquine has been hyped as an effective treatment for COVID-19, notably by President Trump. The March journal article that kicked off the enthusiasm was later followed by a lesser-read news release from the board of its publisher, the International Society of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy, which states the “Board believes the article does not meet the Society’s expected standard.”Marc Bruxelle / ShutterstockIt is not uncommon for media sources like Medium to retract articles or claims that turn out to be false or misleading. Neither are retractions limited to the popular press. In fact, they are common in the sciences, including the medical sciences. Every year, hundreds of papers are retracted, sometimes because of fraud, but more often due to genuine errors that invalidate study findings.2 (The blog Retraction Watch does an admirable job of tracking these.)Reversing mistakes is a key part of the scientific process. Science proceeds in stops and starts. Given the inherent uncertainty in creating new knowledge, errors will be made, and have to be corrected. Even in cases where findings are not officially retracted, they are sometimes reversed— definitively shown to be false, and thus no longer valid pieces of scientific information.3Researchers have found, however, that the process of retraction or reversal does not always work the way it should. Retracted papers are often cited long after problems are identified,4 sometimes at a rate comparable to that before retraction. And in the vast majority of these cases, the authors citing retracted findings treat them as valid.5 (It seems that many of these authors pull information directly from colleagues’ papers, and trust that it is current without actually checking.) Likewise, medical researchers have bemoaned the fact that reversals in practice sometimes move at a glacial pace, with doctors continuing to use contraindicated therapies even though better practices are available.6For example, in 2010, the anesthesiologist Scott Reuben was convicted of health care fraud for fabricating data and publishing it without having performed the reported research. Twenty-one of Reuben’s articles were ultimately retracted. And yet, an investigation four years later found half of these articles were still consistently cited, and that only one-fourth of these citations mentioned that the original work was fraudulent.7 Given that Reuben’s work focused on the use of anesthetics, this failure of retraction is seriously disturbing.Claims with some scientific legitimacy continue to shamble on long after they should be dead. But why don’t scientific retractions always work? At the heart of the matter lies the fact that information takes on a life of its own. Facts, beliefs, and ideas are transmitted socially, from person to person to person. This means that the originator of an idea soon loses control over it. In an age of instant reporting and social media, this can happen at lightning speed.The first models of the social spread of information were actually epidemiological models, developed to track the spread of disease. (Yes, these are the very same models now being used to predict the spread of COVID-19.) These models treat individuals as nodes in a network and suppose that information (or disease) can propagate between connected nodes.Recently, one of us, along with co-authors Travis LaCroix and Anders Geil, repurposed these models to think specifically about failures of retraction and reversal.8 A general feature of retracted information, understood broadly, is that it is less catchy than novel information in the following way. People tend to care about reversals or retractions only when they have already heard the original, false claim. And they tend to share retractions only when those around them are continuing to spread the false claim. This means that retractions actually depend on the spread of false information.We built a contagion model where novel ideas and retractions can spread from person to person, but where retractions only “infect” those who have already heard something false. Across many versions of this model, we find that while a false belief spreads quickly and indiscriminately, its retraction can only follow in the path of its spread, and typically fails to reach many individuals. To quote Mark Twain, “A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes.” In these cases it’s because the truth can’t go anywhere until the lie has gotten there first.Another problem for retractions and reversals is that it can be embarrassing to admit one was wrong, especially where false claims can have life or death consequences. While scientists are expected to regularly update their views under normal circumstances, under the heat of media and political scrutiny during a pandemic they too may be less willing to publicize reversals of opinion.The COVID-19 pandemic has changed lives around the world at a startling speed—and scientists have raced to keep up. Academic journals, accustomed to a comparatively glacial pace of operations, have faced a torrent of new papers to evaluate and process, threatening to overwhelm a peer-review system built largely on volunteer work and the honor system.9 Meanwhile, an army of journalists and amateur epidemiologists scour preprint archives and university press releases for any whiff of the next big development in our understanding of the virus. This has created a perfect storm for information zombies—and although it also means erroneous work is quickly scrutinized and refuted, this often makes little difference to how those ideas spread.Many examples of COVID-19 information zombies look like standard cases of retraction in science, only on steroids. They originate with journal articles written by credentialed scientists that are later retracted, or withdrawn after being refuted by colleagues. For instance, in a now-retracted paper, a team of biologists based in New Delhi, India, suggested that novel coronavirus shared some features with HIV and was likely engineered.10 It appeared on an online preprint archive, where scientists post articles before they have undergone peer review, on January 31; it was withdrawn only two days later, following intense critique of the methods employed and the interpretation of the results by scientists from around the world. Days later, a detailed analysis refuting the article was published in the peer-reviewed journal Emerging Microbes & Infections.11 But a month afterward, the retracted paper was still so widely discussed on social media and elsewhere that it had that highest Altmetric score—a measure of general engagement with scientific research—of any scientific article published or written in the previous eight years. Despite a thorough rejection of the research by the scientific community, the dead information keeps walking.Other cases are more subtle. One major question with far-reaching implications for the future development of the pandemic is to what extent asymptomatic carriers are able to transmit the virus. The first article reporting on asymptomatic transmission was a letter published in the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine claiming that a traveler from China to Germany transmitted the disease to four Germans before her symptoms appeared.12 Within four days, Science reported that the article was flawed because the authors of the letter had not actually spoken with the Chinese traveler, and a follow-up phone call by public health authorities confirmed that she had had mild symptoms while visiting Germany after all.13 Even so, the article has subsequently been cited nearly 500 times according to Google Scholar, and has been tweeted nearly 10,000 times, according to Altmetric.Media reporting on COVID-19 should be linked to authoritative sources that are updated as information changes. Despite the follow-up reporting on this article’s questionable methods, the New England Journal of Medicine did not officially retract it. Instead, a week after publishing the letter, the journal added a supplemental appendix describing the progression of the patient’s symptoms while in Germany, leaving it to the reader to determine whether the patient’s mild early symptoms should truly count. Meanwhile, subsequent research14, 15 involving different cases has suggested that asymptomatic transmission may be possible after all—though as of April 13, the World Health Organization considers the risk of infection from asymptomatic carriers to be “very low.” It may turn out that transmission of the virus can occur before any symptoms appear, or while only mild symptoms are present, or even in patients who will never go on to present symptoms. Even untangling these questions is difficult, and the jury is still out on their answers. But the original basis for claims of confirmed asymptomatic transmission was invalid, and those sharing them are not typically aware of the fact.Another widely discussed article, which claims that the antiviral drug hydroxychloroquine and the antibiotic azithromycin, when administered together, are effective treatments for COVID-19 has drawn enormous amounts of attention to these particular treatments, fueled in part by President Trump.16 These claims, too, may or may not turn out to be true—but the article with which they apparently originated has since received a statement of concern from its publisher, noting that its methodology was problematic. Again, we have a claim that rests on shoddy footing, but which is spreading much farther than the objections can.17 And in the meantime, the increased demand for these medications has led to dangerous shortages for patients who have an established need for them.18The fast-paced and highly uncertain nature of research on COVID-19 has also created the possibility for different kinds of information zombies, which follow a similar pattern as retracted or refuted articles, but with different origins. There have been a number of widely discussed arguments to the effect that the true fatality rate associated with COVID-19 may be ten or even a hundred times lower than early estimates from the World Health Organization, which pegged the so-called “case fatality rate” (CFR)—the number of fatalities per detected case of COVID-19—at 3.4 percent.19-21Some of these arguments have noted that the case fatality rate in certain countries with extensive testing, such as Iceland, Germany, and Norway, is substantially lower. References to the low CFR in these countries have continued to circulate on social media, even though the CFR in all of these locations has crept up over time. In the academic realm, John Ioannidis, a Stanford professor and epidemiologist, noted in an editorial, “The harms of exaggerated information and non‐evidence‐based measures,” published on March 19 in the European Journal of Clinical Investigation, that Germany’s CFR in early March was only 0.2 percent.21 But by mid-April it had climbed to 2.45 percent, far closer to the original WHO estimate. (Ioannidis has not updated the editorial to reflect the changing numbers.) Even Iceland, which has tested more extensively than any other nation, had a CFR of 0.47 percent on April 13, more than 4 times higher than it was a month ago. None of this means that the WHO figure was correct—but it does mean some arguments that it is wildly incorrect must be revisited.What do we do about false claims that refuse to die? Especially when these claims have serious implications for decision-making in light of a global pandemic? To some degree, we have to accept that in a world with rapid information sharing on social media, information zombies will appear. Still, we must combat them. Science journals and science journalists rightly recognize that there is intense interest in COVID-19 and that the science is evolving rapidly. But that does not obviate the risks of spreading information that is not properly vetted or failing to emphasize when arguments depend on data that is very much in flux.Wherever possible, media reporting on COVID-19 developments should be linked to authoritative sources of information that are updated as the information changes. The Oxford-based Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine maintains several pages that review the current evidence on rapidly evolving questions connected to COVID-19—including whether current data supports the use of hydroxychloroquine and the current best estimates for COVID-19 fatality rates. Authors and platforms seeking to keep the record straight should not just remove or revise now-false information, but should clearly state what has changed and why. Platforms such as Twitter should provide authors, especially scientists and members of the media, the ability to explain why Tweets that may be referenced elsewhere have been deleted. Scientific preprint archives should encourage authors to provide an overview of major changes when articles are revised.And we should all become more active sharers of retraction. It may be embarrassing to shout one’s errors from the rooftops, but that is what scientists, journals, and responsible individuals must do to slay the information zombies haunting our social networks.Cailin O’Connor and James Owen Weatherall are an associate professor and professor of logic and philosophy at the University of California, Irvine. They are coauthors of The Misinformation Age: How False Beliefs Spread.Lead image: nazareno / ShutterstockReferences 1. Liu, W. & Li, H. COVID-19 attacks the 1-beta chain of hemoglobin and captures the porphyrin to inhibit human heme metabolism. ChemRxiv (2020).2. Wager, E. & Williams, P. Why and how do journals retract articles? An analysis of Medline retractions 1988-2008. Journal of Medical Ethics 37, 567-570 (2011).3. Prasad, V., Gall, V., & Cifu, A. The frequency of medical reversal. Archives of Internal Medicine 171, 1675-1676 (2011).4. Budd, J.M., Sievert, M., & Schultz, T.R. Phenomena of retraction: Reasons for retraction and citations to the publications. The Journal of the American Medical Association 280, 296-297 (1998).5. Madlock-Brown, C.R. & Eichmann, D. The (lack of) impact of retraction on citation networks. Science and Engineering Ethics 21, 127-137 (2015).6. Prasad, V. & Cifu, A. Medical reversal: Why we must raise the bar before adopting new technologies. Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 84, 471-478 (2011).7. Bornemann-Cimenti, H., Szilagyi, I.S., & Sandner-Kiesling, A. Perpetuation of retracted publications using the example of the Scott S. Reuben case: Incidences, reasons and possible improvements. Science and Engineering Ethics 22, 1063-1072 (2016).8. LaCroix, T., Geil, A., & O’Connor, C. The dynamics of retraction in epistemic networks. Preprint. (2019).9. Jarvis, C. Journals, peer reviewers cope with surge in COVID-19 publications. The Scientist (2020).10. Pradhan, P., et al. Uncanny similarity of unique inserts in the 2019-nCoV spike protein to HIV-1 gp120 and Gag. bioRxiv (2020).11. Xiao, C. HIV-1 did not contribute to the 2019-nCoV genome. Journal of Emerging Microbes and Infections 9, 378-381 (2020).12. Rothe, C., et al. Transmission of 2019-nCoV infection from an asymptomatic contact in Germany. New England Journal of Medicine 382, 970-971 (2020).13. Kupferschmidt, K. Study claiming new coronavirus can be transmitted by people without symptoms was flawed. Science (2020).14. Hu, Z., et al. Clinical characteristics of 24 asymptomatic infections with COVID-19 screened among close contacts in Nanjing, China. Science China Life Sciences (2020). Retrieved from doi: 10.1007/s11427-020-1661-4.15. Bai, R., et al. Presumed asymptomatic carrier transmission of COVID-19. The Journal of the American Medical Association 323, 1406-1407 (2020).16. Gautret, P., et al. Hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin as a treatment of COVID-19: results of an open-label non-randomized clinical trial. International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents (2020).17. Ferner, R.E. & Aronson, J.K. Hydroxychloroquine for COVID-19: What do the clinical trials tell us? The Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine (2020).18. The Arthritis Foundation. Hydroxychloroquine (Plaquenil) shortage causing concern. Arthritis.org (2020).19. Oke, J. & Heneghan, C. Global COVID-19 case fatality rates. The Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine (2020).20. Bendavid, E. & Bhattacharya, J. Is the coronavirus as deadly as they say? The Wall Street Journal (2020).21. Ionnidis, J.P.A. Coronavirus disease 2019: The harms of exaggerated information and non-evidence-based measures. European Journal of Clinical Investigation 50, e13222 (2020).Read More… Full Article