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Here’s How Kids Are Using Soft Drinks to Fake Positive Results on COVID-19 Tests

Children are always going to find cunning ways to bunk off school, and the latest trick is to fake a positive COVID-19 lateral flow test (LFT) using soft drinks.

So how are fruit juices, cola, and devious kids fooling the tests, and is there a way to tell a fake positive result from a real one? I’ve tried to find out.

 

First, I thought it best to check the claims, so I cracked open bottles of cola and orange juice, then deposited a few drops directly onto LFTs. Sure enough, a few minutes later, two lines appeared on each test, supposedly indicating the presence of the virus that causes COVID-19.

It’s worth understanding how the tests work. If you open up an LFT device, you’ll find a strip of paper-like material, called nitrocellulose, and a small red pad, hidden under the plastic casing below the T-line.

Absorbed to the red pad are antibodies that bind to the COVID-19 virus. They are also attached to gold nanoparticles (tiny particles of gold actually appear red), which allow us to see where the antibodies are on the device.

When you do a test, you mix your sample with a liquid buffer solution, ensuring the sample stays at an optimum pH, before dripping it on the strip.

Two COVID-19 at-home tests show fake positives due to cola and orange juice. (Mark Lorch)

The fluid wicks up the nitrocellulose strip and picks up the gold and antibodies. The latter also bind to the virus, if present. Further up the strip, next to the T (for test), are more antibodies that bind the virus.

But these antibodies are not free to move – they are stuck to the nitrocellulose. As the red smear of gold-labeled antibodies passes this second set of antibodies, these also grab hold of the virus.

 

The virus is then bound to both sets of antibodies – leaving everything, including the gold, immobilized on a line next to the T on the device, indicating a positive test.

Gold antibodies that haven’t bound to the virus carry on up the strip where they meet a third set of antibodies, not designed to pick up COVID-19, stuck at the C (for control) line. These trap the remaining gold particles, without having to do so via the virus.

This final line is used to indicate the test has worked.

Acid test

So how can a soft drink cause the appearance of a red T line?

One possibility is that the drinks contain something that the antibodies recognize and bind to, just as they do to the virus. But this is rather unlikely. The reason antibodies are used in tests like these is that they are incredibly fussy about what they bind to.

There’s all sorts of stuff in the snot and saliva collected by the swabs you take from the nose and mouth, and the antibodies totally ignore this mess of protein, other viruses, and remains of your breakfast. So they aren’t going to react to the ingredients of a soft drink.

 

A much more likely explanation is that something in the drinks is affecting the function of the antibodies. A range of fluids, from fruit juice to cola, have been used to fool the tests, but they all have one thing in common – they are highly acidic.

The citric acid in orange juice, phosphoric acid in cola and malic acid in apple juice give these beverages a pH between 2.5 and 4. These are pretty harsh conditions for antibodies, which have evolved to work largely within the bloodstream, with its almost neutral pH of about 7.4.

Maintaining an ideal pH for the antibodies is key to the correct function of the test, and that’s the job of the liquid buffer solution that you mix your sample with, provided with the test.

The critical role of the buffer is highlighted by the fact that if you mix cola with the buffer – as shown in this debunking of an Austrian politician’s claim that mass testing is worthless – then the LFTs behave exactly as you’d expect: negative for COVID-19.

So without the buffer, the antibodies in the test are fully exposed to the acidic pH of the beverages. And this has a dramatic effect on their structure and function.

 

Antibodies are proteins, which are comprised of amino acid building blocks, attached together to form long, linear chains. These chains fold up into very specific structures. Even a small change to the chains can dramatically impact a protein’s function.

These structures are maintained by a network of many thousands of interactions between the various parts of the protein. For example, negatively charged parts of a protein will be attracted to positively charged areas.

But in acidic conditions, the protein becomes increasingly positively charged. As a result, many of the interactions that hold the protein together are disrupted, the delicate structure of the protein is affected and it no longer functions correctly. In this case, the antibodies’ sensitivity to the virus is lost.

Given this, you might expect that the acidic drinks would result in completely blank tests. But denatured proteins are sticky beasts. All of those perfectly evolved interactions that would normally hold the protein together are now orphaned and looking for something to bind to.

So a likely explanation is that the immobilized antibodies at the T-line stick directly to the gold particles as they pass by, producing the notorious cola-induced false-positive result.

Is there then a way to spot a fake positive test? The antibodies (like most proteins) are capable of refolding and regaining their function when they are returned to more favorable conditions.

(Mark Lorch)

Above: A COVID-19 test with a fake positive caused by cola and a COVID-19 test that used cola after it was washed with a buffer. 

So I tried washing a test that had been dripped with cola with buffer solution, and sure enough, the immobilized antibodies at the T-line regained normal function and released the gold particles, revealing the true negative result on the test.

Children, I applaud your ingenuity, but now that I’ve found a way to uncover your trickery I suggest you use your cunning to devise a set of experiments and test my hypothesis. Then we can publish your results in a peer-reviewed journal.

Mark Lorch, Professor of Science Communication and Chemistry, University of Hull.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 

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This Hubble image is so incredible you’ll swear it’s fake – BGR

Science-fiction flicks have really skewed our perception of what various features of the universe look like. It’s become so easy to make fake planets, galaxies, and other celestial sights that it’s easy to forget how incredible our own totally real universe actually is. NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope is always here to remind us, and a new snapshot of the distant Veil Nebula shows us that even the most bloated special effects budget can’t compare with what Mother Nature has painted in the cosmos.

The image, which was taken at a ridiculous distance of 2,100 light-years from Earth, is absolutely awe-inspiring in every way possible. The nebula you see here is the result of the death of a massive star that is estimated to have been 20 times the mass of our own Sun. That’s a whole lot of material being blasted into space, and this swirling mass of gasses is what is left some 10,000 years after the star detonated in a blast that would have decimated anything in its path.

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The Veil Nebula is what is known as a supernova remnant. That just means that it’s a portion of what is left after a supernova explosion, but what makes this image so interesting is that it’s actually a modified version of the same snapshot that was showcased by NASA six years ago. Additional processing of the raw data from Hubble has provided scientists (and, luckily, the rest of us) with an even more detailed look at the waves of gas.

“To create this colorful image, observations were taken by Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3 instrument using five different filters. The new post-processing methods have further enhanced details of emissions from doubly ionized oxygen (seen here in blues), ionized hydrogen, and ionized nitrogen (seen here in reds),” NASA explains in a blog post. “The Veil Nebula is the visible portion of the nearby Cygnus Loop, a supernova remnant formed roughly 10,000 years ago by the death of a massive star. That star — which was 20 times the mass of the Sun — lived fast and died young, ending its life in a cataclysmic release of energy. Despite this stellar violence, the shockwaves and debris from the supernova sculpted the Veil Nebula’s delicate tracery of ionized gas — creating a scene of surprising astronomical beauty.”

Nebulas like this might seem like the bookend of a star’s life, but really they’re just another step in the life cycle of stars and planets. All of these gasses will eventually coalesce into tighter and tighter clumps. Mixed with dust and other material, it could become an entirely new planetary system. It might take billions of years for that to happen, but this constant recycling of material is what happens in our universe, and it’s an awesome thing to behold.

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Mike Wehner has reported on technology and video games for the past decade, covering breaking news and trends in VR, wearables, smartphones, and future tech.

Most recently, Mike served as Tech Editor at The Daily Dot, and has been featured in USA Today, Time.com, and countless other web and print outlets. His love of
reporting is second only to his gaming addiction.



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No VW U.S. name change as company says fake release was an April Fool’s marketing stunt

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – German automaker Volkswagen AG’s U.S. unit issued a false news release on Tuesday claiming it would rename its U.S. operations as “Voltswagen of America” in a marketing stunt designed to call attention to its electric vehicle efforts, the company said on Tuesday.

VW came under criticism on social media for its misleading news release, some commenters recalling the company’s diesel emissions scandal and years of misleading customers and regulators.

“Volkswagen of America will not be changing its name to Voltswagen. The renaming was designed to be an announcement in the spirit of April Fool’s Day, highlighting the launch of the all-electric ID.4 SUV and signaling our commitment to bringing electric mobility to all,” a VW U.S. spokesman said in a statement.

The news release, posted on its website and accompanied by tweets, was reported by Reuters and other outlets globally and included a detailed description of its purported rebranding efforts and new logos. The company pulled it late Tuesday.

A Volkswagen spokesman in Germany called the rebranding a “nice idea” with a focus on marketing. Volkswagen Group of America CEO Scott Keogh did not respond to messages.

At least one analyst wrote a research note praising the name change. VW’s preferred shares closed 4.7% higher. Ordinary shares closed up 10.3%.

The world’s second-largest carmaker expects to double electric vehicle deliveries and boost profits for its core brand this year after stepping up its switch to fully electric vehicles.

Some VW officials have expressed frustration that its significant U.S. EV efforts have not drawn as much attention as Tesla or General Motors.

The Volkswagen brand aims to invest 16 billion euros ($19 billion) in electrification and digitalization by 2025. It has committed to sell one million EVs worldwide by 2025.

Volkswagen in 2015 admitted to using illegal software to rig diesel engine tests in the United States, sparking Germany’s biggest corporate crisis and costing the carmaker more than 32 billion euros ($38 billion) in fines, refits and legal costs.

In 2017, VW pleaded guilty to fraud, obstruction of justice and making false statements as part of a $4.3 billion settlement reached with the U.S. Justice Department over the automaker’s diesel emissions scandal.

Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Bernadette Baum and Howard Goller

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Lenovo made a Demon Slayer-themed gaming chair with a fake sword built-in

Lenovo isn’t a major player in the gaming chair scene, but its Demon Slayer-themed creation shows that it could easily dice up the competition if it chose to. Per Kotaku, the company has made a limited edition chair that has a holstered katana built onto its side. But before you imagine spinning around in the chair with a sword out, there’s sadly no katana in the holster. Is it false advertising to make a Demon Slayer chair with which you can’t actually slay demons?

Doubly sad is that you can’t buy the chair. Only five are being made for a giveaway promo in Japan. Hey, if you live in Japan, follow Lenovo of Japan’s Twitter account, then retweet a tweet, and try to win this chair on behalf of us all.

All of the necessary parts are here, except for the katana itself.
Image: Lenovo

Lenovo says this is a customized version of a preexisting model, but it still looks cool. Its colorway matches the wardrobe of Giyu Tomioka of the Demon Slayer series, and perhaps this really could have been a hit here since Demon Slayer is coming to the US after a big box office launch in Japan. But alas, I’m stuck here on a Friday, gawking over a chair I can’t have, thinking of ways in which this will inspire so many people to try to mount katanas to their gaming chairs. Be careful!

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Tessica Brown Imposter Shut Down by GoFundMe After Fake Hospital Bill

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Animals fake death for long periods to escape predators

European antlion (Euroleon nostras) on its dorsal side playing dead. Credit: Nigel R. Franks

Many animals feign death to try to escape their predators, with some individuals in prey species remaining motionless, if in danger, for extended lengths of time.

Charles Darwin recorded a beetle that remained stationary for 23 minutes—however the University of Bristol has documented an individual antlion larvae pretending to be dead for an astonishing 61 minutes. Of equal importance, the amount of time that an individual remains motionless is not only long but unpredictable. This means that a predator will be unable to predict when a potential prey item will move again, attract attention, and become a meal.

Predators are hungry and cannot wait indefinitely. Similarly, prey may be losing opportunities to get on with their lives if they remain motionless for too long. Thus, death-feigning might best be thought of as part of a deadly game of hide and seek in which prey might gain most by feigning death if alternative victims are readily available.

The study, published today in science journal Biology Letters, involved evaluating the benefits of death-feigning in terms of a predator visiting small populations of conspicuous prey. Researchers used computer simulations that utilise the marginal value theorem, a classical model in optimization.

Lead author of the paper Professor Nigel R. Franks from the University of Bristol’s School of Biological Sciences, said: “Imagine you are in a garden full of identical soft fruit bushes. You go to the first bush. Initially collecting and consuming fruit is fast and easy, but as you strip the bush finding more fruit gets harder and harder and more time consuming.

“At some stage, you should decide to go to another bush and begin again. You are greedy and you want to eat as many fruit as quickly as possible. The marginal value theorem would tell you how long to spend at each bush given that time will also be lost moving to the next bush.

“We use this approach to consider a small bird visiting patches of conspicuous antlion pits and show that antlion larvae that waste some of the predator’s time, by ‘playing dead’ if they are dropped, change the game significantly. In a sense, they encourage the predator to search elsewhere.”

The modelling suggests that antlion larvae would not gain significantly if they remained motionless for even longer than they actually do. This suggests that in this arms race between predators and prey, death-feigning has been prolonged to such an extent that it can hardly be bettered.

Professor Franks added: “Thus, playing dead is rather like a conjuring trick. Magicians distract an audience from seeing their sleights of hand by encouraging them to look elsewhere. Just so with the antlion larvae playing dead—the predator looks elsewhere. Playing dead seems to be a very good way to stay alive.”


How long to play dead in order to stay alive?


More information:
Hide-and-seek strategies and post-contact immobility, Biology Letters (2021). royalsocietypublishing.org/doi … .1098/rsbl.2020.0892
Provided by
University of Bristol

Citation:
Animals fake death for long periods to escape predators (2021, March 2)
retrieved 3 March 2021
from https://phys.org/news/2021-03-animals-fake-death-periods-predators.html

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Parents warn of fentanyl danger from fake pills after Rocklin teen’s heartbreaking death

The piano in the Didier family home in Rocklin has gone silent. The teenager who used to wake his parents and siblings with the sounds of beautiful music is gone – the victim of a growing and terrifying trend of fentanyl poisoning. Zachary Didier, 17, was a straight “A” student with what seemed like a limitless future. He was a standout athlete in soccer and track, and a talented self-taught musician. “Zach was just a beautiful soul. He loved life. He loved people, he loved his family,” said Zach’s mom, Laura Didier.The Whitney High School senior was set to graduate in June with honors and had his sights on Stanford or UCLA. “He lived the most incredible life. But we have to talk about how he died because it’s information we all have to know,” Didier said. On Dec. 27, during winter break, Zach’s dad found him slumped over his desk with his head resting in his arm. He wasn’t breathing and CPR had no effect. “I was utterly confused and obviously in a fog and traumatized,” Chris Didier recalled. “How does this happen? What happened? He just fell asleep.”What was first an inexplicable tragedy has since become a cautionary tale. Zach was a victim of fentanyl poisoning. Laura and Chris Didier didn’t know, but on a couple of occasions their son had experimented with prescription drugs — the same medications millions of people use for pain management every day. Zach thought he was buying Percocet, but what he got instead was a counterfeit pill made of fentanyl, a powerful prescription painkiller that, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, is 50 to 100 times stronger than morphine. Just a few grains can be lethal.“Unfortunately, we’ve now come to know other parents who have suffered this tragic type of loss with fentanyl poisoning and it’s heartbreaking how many of us there are,” Laura Didier said. The Didier family is haunted not only by the fake pills but by the way Zach got them. He didn’t slip down a dark and seedy alley. He just opened Snapchat. The same phone app millions of people use. “This is an important message to get out that this is a big game-changer. And what may have been OK, or relatively safe in the 70s and 80s, or even the 90s … This is a very different environment right now,” Chris Didier said.It was not easy for Chris and Laura Didier to share their son’s story publicly. There is a stigma that surrounds drugs. Although Zach had no history of addiction, they were worried the truth might tarnish people’s memory of him. They are now committed to awareness and ensuring no other child is lost the same way.“We need to talk about this. We need to talk about what’s happening. We can’t protect Zach now, but hopefully, we can protect your kid,” said Laura.| Video | Parents warn about fake pills made with fentanyl

The piano in the Didier family home in Rocklin has gone silent.

The teenager who used to wake his parents and siblings with the sounds of beautiful music is gone – the victim of a growing and terrifying trend of fentanyl poisoning.

Zachary Didier, 17, was a straight “A” student with what seemed like a limitless future. He was a standout athlete in soccer and track, and a talented self-taught musician.

“Zach was just a beautiful soul. He loved life. He loved people, he loved his family,” said Zach’s mom, Laura Didier.

The Whitney High School senior was set to graduate in June with honors and had his sights on Stanford or UCLA.

“He lived the most incredible life. But we have to talk about how he died because it’s information we all have to know,” Didier said.

On Dec. 27, during winter break, Zach’s dad found him slumped over his desk with his head resting in his arm. He wasn’t breathing and CPR had no effect.

“I was utterly confused and obviously in a fog and traumatized,” Chris Didier recalled. “How does this happen? What happened? He just fell asleep.”

What was first an inexplicable tragedy has since become a cautionary tale. Zach was a victim of fentanyl poisoning.

Laura and Chris Didier didn’t know, but on a couple of occasions their son had experimented with prescription drugs — the same medications millions of people use for pain management every day.

Zach thought he was buying Percocet, but what he got instead was a counterfeit pill made of fentanyl, a powerful prescription painkiller that, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, is 50 to 100 times stronger than morphine. Just a few grains can be lethal.

“Unfortunately, we’ve now come to know other parents who have suffered this tragic type of loss with fentanyl poisoning and it’s heartbreaking how many of us there are,” Laura Didier said.

The Didier family is haunted not only by the fake pills but by the way Zach got them. He didn’t slip down a dark and seedy alley. He just opened Snapchat. The same phone app millions of people use.

“This is an important message to get out that this is a big game-changer. And what may have been OK, or relatively safe in the 70s and 80s, or even the 90s … This is a very different environment right now,” Chris Didier said.

It was not easy for Chris and Laura Didier to share their son’s story publicly. There is a stigma that surrounds drugs. Although Zach had no history of addiction, they were worried the truth might tarnish people’s memory of him.

They are now committed to awareness and ensuring no other child is lost the same way.

“We need to talk about this. We need to talk about what’s happening. We can’t protect Zach now, but hopefully, we can protect your kid,” said Laura.

| Video | Parents warn about fake pills made with fentanyl

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WandaVision’s ‘Pietro’ Funko Pop May Prove He’s a Fake

The recent release of Pietro’s WandaVision Funko Pop may reveal a huge secret about his character.

WARNING: The follow contains potentially major spoilers for Marvel’s WandaVision, streaming on Disney+.

Following WandaVision‘s Episode 6 release, and in conjunction with it’s Virtual Con Spring 2021 product reveals, Funko added some new Pops to their WandaVision collection, matching the earlier-announced figures of Vision and Wanda in their Halloween costumes. A two-pack featuring Billy and Tommy in their costumes is being sold as a virtual Emerald City Comic-Con exclusive, while one of Pietro in his costume will be released as a Funko.com exclusive.

However, there’s something strange about the description that accompanies the photo of the Pietro figure, on both Instagram and Twitter. Both captions read, “Coming in March: Pop! Marvel: Marvel Studios’ – WandaVision – “Pietro Maximoff” (Funko exclusive)!” Pietro’s name is presented in quotation marks. This isn’t consistent with the way characters are labeled in Funko product listings (which typically mirror what their boxes will say, though no pictures of the boxes have been released yet). The twins, for example, are labeled “Marvel: Marvel Studios’ WandaVision – Billy and Tommy.”

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RELATED: WandaVision Has Given Randall Park the Spotlight He Deserves

This raises some questions. Is the figure labeled “Pietro Maximoff” because it represents the Evan Peters-played Pietro, who is known even to many of the other characters in WandaVision as the wrong Pietro? He’s not original to the MCU; the Pietro that Wanda grew up with, the Pietro in Age of Ultron, was played by Aaron Taylor-Johnson, had a Sokovian accent, was markedly more serious and related to his sister in a much gentler, more intense way. The Evan Peters iteration of Quicksilver — Peter Maximoff — in the X-Men films, he is an American jokester, and his version of Pietro in WandaVision is depicted much more like that. The siblings even discuss this in the show.

RELATED: WandaVision: SWORD’s Sentient Weapon Isn’t Vision – It’s [SPOILER]

Another possibility, though, is that the figure is labeled “Pietro Maximoff” because the character Evan Peters is playing isn’t actually Pietro at all. Between his odd mannerisms, inconsistent appearance and awareness of many (though not all) of the details of what has happened to Westview, fans have speculated that he’s actually another, possibly villainous character disguising himself as Pietro to get close to Wanda. He might be Loki, which would tie in with the upcoming Disney+ Loki series; he could be the comics villain Nightmare, who preys on sleeping victims; he could also be Mephisto, whose appearance has been predicted by fans since the beginning of WandaVision, considering his connection to Wanda and her sons in the comics.

Whatever the situation is, Funko’s use of the quotation marks around Pietro’s name is a spoiler of some kind. It could just speak to the illusory nature of WandaVision, but it could also reference a more sinister pretense.

Written by Jac Schaeffer and directed by Matt Shakman, WandaVision stars Elizabeth Olsen as Wanda Maximoff/Scarlet Witch, Paul Bettany as Vision, Randall Park as Agent Jimmy Woo, Kat Dennings as Darcy Lewis, Teyonah Parris as Monica Rambeau, and Kathryn Hahn as Agnes.

KEEP READING: The CBR WandaVision Hub for News, Easter Eggs, Reviews, Rumors, Theories and MORE

Infinity Train: HBO Max Announces Book 4 With an Enigmatic Teaser


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Squawking bird blows the whistle on fake video trying to tilt Ecuador election | Ecuador

An attempt to influence the Ecuadorian elections with a fake video purportedly showing leftwing guerrillas endorsing one of the candidates was thwarted by a ground-dwelling bird and a keen-eared ornithologist.

In the video, shared on social media before the election’s first round on Sunday, three masked and armed men stood before the red and black flag of the ELN – Colombia’s largest remaining guerrilla force – and expressed their support for the leftist candidate Andrés Arauz.

A caption at the foot of the screen described the setting as the “Colombian jungle”, but a shrill whistle from somewhere in the shrub gave the game away.

The video purporting to show ELN support for the leftist candidate Andrés Arauz. Photograph: Manuel Sánchez/Twitter

“I recognised the whistle instantly and I knew that the video could not have been filmed in Colombia,” said Manuel Sánchez, an ornithologist and bird guide. He had identified the avian whistleblower as a pale-browed tinamou – which is not native to Colombia.

“Tinamous are quite primitive birds. They live on the forest floor and they don’t sing; they have short, inflected whistles,” said Sánchez. “It was just luck that this particular species lives in a very small and rare dry forest ecosystem in western Ecuador and north-west Peru.” Although the ELN have previously operated in northern Ecuador, there is no record of activity in those ecosystem areas.

Spelling mistakes, strange accents and unlikely weaponry further undermined the authenticity of the video, which emerged after the Colombian weekly magazine Semana claimed it had uncovered documents showing ELN support for Arauz. The ELN denies the claim and disavowed the video.

In recent years, organizations such as Bellingcat have mobilized citizen journalists and volunteer experts to verify or disprove online videos. Although the Colombian military has previously used ornithologists to help locate hostages from audio recordings, this is the first time such a process has been used to clip the wings of fake guerrillas.

Sánchez hopes the attention his own tweets have brought will draw international attention to the plight of the pale-browed tinamou’s habitat. “The Tumbesian dry forest we share with Peru is one of the most threatened ecosystems in the Americas, due to the growth of the shrimping industry, agriculture and roads,” he said.

Ecuador will hold a runoff vote in April.



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Here’s how to tell the difference between a fake N95 mask and a real one

Between the time the pandemic began and the year ended, US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) seized over 14.6 million counterfeit face masks entering the US, the agency told CNN.

N95 masks are considered the gold standard for mask usage, but counterfeit doppelgängers may threaten Americans’ safety. Not meeting US safety standards means they may not filter out airborne particles effectively, the agency said.

Here’s how you can spot a fake N95 mask.

The most important thing: NIOSH approval

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health is a part of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that focuses on worker safety and health.

Before filtering facepiece respirators — a fancy term that includes N95 masks — can be used in any workplace, they must be certified by NIOSH.

For an N95 mask to get a NIOSH stamp of approval, it needs to filter at least 95% of airborne particles.

When finding out if an N95 mask is fake or not, NIOSH markings are your compass. But there’s some vetting you can do before you even have a mask in hand.

What to consider before you buy

When buying masks online, there are a few things you can ask yourself, according to CDC guidance on spotting fake PPE.

If you’re buying directly through a website:

  • Are there typos, bad grammar or other errors on the site?
  • Are there website flaws, like unfinished or blank pages, dummy text, broken links and misspelled domains?

If you’re buying through a third-party marketplace:

  • Does the listing call the product “genuine” or “real”? Legitimate companies don’t need to tell buyers their products are realat least not in the product name.
  • Have reviews been left on the product, or on the seller? Buyers unhappy with the product may reveal that it is poorly made or illegitimate.
  • Is the price too good to be true? It probably is.
  • Is the seller selling the same items over time, or keeping with trends? Legitimate businesses tend to stay consistent.
  • Does the seller put their contact information in images? If so, they may be skirting around marketplace policy to keep interactions between buyers and sellers on the site.

How to check if your mask is real

Okay, but what if you’ve already masks off a website or marketplace and don’t know if they’re the real deal?

Here’s your rule-of-thumb: No markings means no approval.

NIOSH-approved masks have an approval label on or within the mask packaging — either on the box or in the users’ instructions. The mask should also have an abbreviated approval marking.

The approval number on your mask should begin with “TC.” The mask should also have a NIOSH logo printed on it. This image from the CDC can help you identify your mask’s markings.
Then, you can check for the approval number on NIOSH certified equipment list.

Some other red flags to look out for include:

  • Any decorative elements, like sequins.
  • Ear loops instead of head bands. Head bands are crucial to the N95’s tight fit.
  • Claims for the of approval for children. NIOSH does not approve masks for children.

Got a real mask? Share these resources

The CDC and NIOSH have resources to help you in spotting counterfeit masks, or even other PPE and medical gear. You can start here and get more tips on vetting masks. You can also look through photos of non-NIOSH-approved masks.
Then, you can read about how to protect yourself from buying counterfeit goods.

Got a fake mask? Report it

Fake masks aren’t the only counterfeit products being sold, nor the only scam to capitalize on the pandemic.

Criminal organizations are also trying to sell counterfeit pharmaceuticals, other PPE and medical devices to “unsuspecting American consumers,” CBP Executive Director for Trade Policies and Programs, John Leonard, told CNN.

Covid-19 has been a fertile time for other scams of all kinds to proliferate — most recently regarding vaccines.
While staying aware and keeping up-to-date, you can report any counterfeit masks to CBP through their reporting system, or by calling 1-800-BE-ALERT.
You can also report to the National Intellectual Property Rights Coordination Center online, or by telephone at 1-866-IPR-2060.

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