Tag Archives: tens

Astounding new Webb image reveals tens of thousands of young stars

Enlarge / Webb’s Near-Infrared Camera displays the Tarantula Nebula star-forming region in a new light.

NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Webb ERO Production Team

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope continues to provide astronomers with unprecedented views of the Universe.

On Tuesday, the space agency released a mosaic image that shows a panorama of star formation stretching across a staggering 340 light years. Astronomers call the main feature in this image 30 Doradus, but it has a catchier nickname—the Tarantula Nebula—due to its long, dusty filaments.

This stellar nursery is located in the Large Magellanic Cloud, one of the closest galaxies to our own Milky Way at a distance of 160,000 light years. The Tarantula Nebula was already a pretty spectacular feature in telescopes because it’s the biggest and brightest stellar nebula in the local neighborhood of galaxies, which includes the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies.

But Webb brings the nebula into stunning clarity because the telescope observes light in the infrared portion of the spectrum, which is light with a slightly longer wavelength than is visible to the human eye. This allows the telescope to capture light from distant objects that might otherwise be blocked by cosmic dust particles, which are more likely to interfere with light at a shorter wavelength.

As a result, Webb’s imaging of the Tarantula Nebula is rather beautiful, revealing tens of thousands of young stars that were previously blocked by cosmic dust.

Astronomers are keen to better understand the process by which stars are formed, which is foundational to grasping the physics of the Universe. Webb’s better images and data will provide new insight into this process and show why there is such a multiplicity of different sized stars, with widely variable properties, in our galaxy and beyond.

Read original article here

This Ice Cliff is One of the Few Places With Exposed Water ice in the Mid-Latitudes on Mars. It’s Probably Tens of Millions of Years old

Because of the orbiters and landers that have studied Mars over the years, scientists have learned that water ice is very likely locked away just under the surface throughout the planet’s mid-latitudes. These regions – especially in the northern hemisphere — are mostly covered with smooth material and scientists suspect ice is just underneath.

But sometimes, images like this give one from the HiRISE (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment) camera on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, provides a glimpse of the ice that might be buried below the surface. This image shows a cliff jutting out of the normally smooth terrain, and the cliff is covered with bright ice.

“The bright material on the cliff face is icy and is preserved only because the cliff points away from the equator, so it is shaded most of the time,” wrote HiRISE team member Shane Byrne. “Faint bands on the cliff might indicate layers in the ice that record different climate conditions. We do not know how much time this ice took to accumulate here, but studies elsewhere on Mars indicate that material like this is sometimes at least tens of millions of years old.”

Remove All Ads on Universe Today

Join our Patreon for as little as $3!

Get the ad-free experience for life

Byrne said the cliff in this image is one example out of a few dozen that are known. However, if sunlight hits these icy cliffs, and if the cliff is steep enough, sometimes an avalanche can take place as the ice sublimates away. HiRISE has previously taken several images of avalanches as they are taking place!

An avalanche on Mars captured by the HiRISE camera on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter on November 27, 2011. Credit: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona.

Back in 2019, scientists used data from MRO and the Mars Odyssey mission to create a map of water ice in the Martian mid-latitudes where they believe the ice could be as little as an inch (2.5 centimeters) below the surface.

“You wouldn’t need a backhoe to dig up this ice. You could use a shovel,” said the lead author of the study, Sylvain Piqueux of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. “We’re continuing to collect data on buried ice on Mars, zeroing in on the best places for astronauts to land.”

This rainbow-colored map shows underground water ice on Mars. Cool colors are closer to the surface than warm colors; black zones indicate areas where a spacecraft would sink into fine dust; the outlined box represents the ideal region to send astronauts for them to dig up water ice. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU

The water ice just below the surface would provide easily accessible in-situ resources for future explorers on Mars. While there are several enticing places they could land, a large portion of a region called Arcadia Planitia is the most tempting target in the northern hemisphere. The map above shows lots of blue and purple in this region, representing water ice less than one foot (30 centimeters) below the surface; warm colors are over two feet (60 centimeters) deep.

Landing humans on Mars is likely a decade or two away, but in the meantime, MRO and HiRISE will keep circling the planet, on the lookout for landing sites that might include water ice nearby.

Check out all the stunning imagery of Mars on the HiRISE camera website.

Read original article here

Solana, Nomad crypto wallets are hacked, with losses in the tens of millions

Comment

A pair of crypto hacks totaling nearly $200 million in losses and probably affecting more than 10,000 users has prompted worry in an industry already unsettled by falling prices.

On Wednesday, Solana, a popular blockchain and token, said that some wallets that held its assets had been breached. At least 7,700 such wallets are believed to be affected, the company said, while London-based blockchain-analysis firm Elliptic put the amount stolen at $5.2 million in crypto, which includes Solana tokens and the stablecoin known as USD.

“An exploit allowed a malicious actor to drain funds from a number of wallets on Solana,” the company said via Twitter. “Engineers are currently working with multiple security researchers and ecosystem teams to identify the root cause of the exploit, which is unknown at this time.”

The hack is believed to have taken hold on wallets such as Slope and Phantom. These are “hot wallets” — that is, wallets that allow for lightning-fast transactions because they are always connected to the internet, as opposed to “cold wallets,” which usually require a USB drive and have long periods of disconnection. Solana — which at one time had the fifth-most-popular token before a slide — has made a name for itself as a blockchain that can transfer funds extremely quickly.

The news follows Monday’s revelation from Nomad, a so-called blockchain bridge, which acknowledged that about $190 million had been taken from it after a hacker infiltrated its system. The attack was known as a “free-for-all,” because the hacker’s original code allowed anyone to copy it and steal the crypto for themselves. It is not known where the money went.

Nomad said its executives were working with law enforcement and a blockchain data firm called TRM Labs to locate the funds, with no update as of Wednesday afternoon. It said they were working on “investigation/recovery” as well as “technical fixes.”

In an unusual move, the company early Wednesday provided an address for anyone who might have chosen to grab the money in a noble act of protection.

“Dear white hat hackers and ethical researcher friends who have been safeguarding ETH/ERC-20 tokens, please send the funds to the following wallet address on ethereum,” it said on Twitter. It is not known whether any good Samaritans took the company up on its offer.

A blockchain bridge allows consumers to swap crypto from one blockchain to another — say, from bitcoin to ethereum — making it vulnerable on what security experts call “both sides,” weaknesses on either blockchain. These bridges also tend to be newer and, in some cases, more hastily designed. In March, another blockchain bridge known as Ronin was hacked for amounts totaling more than $600 million in crypto.

“To date, approximately $1.8 billion has been stolen from these services and it’s worrying that their security standards don’t seem to match the huge amounts of capital being entrusted to them,” Tom Robinson, co-founder and chief scientist of Elliptic, said in an email to The Washington Post, referring to bridges.

Meanwhile, the Solana case has prompted concern because it was made vulnerable by factors out of its control. While some argue the hack does not show that any of the industry’s foundations are shaky — “This wasn’t a core blockchain problem, likely seems like one app someone built was buggy,” crypto mogul Sam Bankman-Fried told Fortune on Wednesday — it highlighted to critics the interconnectedness of crypto networks and the inability of any one part to fully vet all the others.

While the hacks involved discrete entities, blockchain bridges and hot wallets also underline what many crypto enthusiasts say is so appealing about the form: ease of use. The former allows disparate blockchains to communicate — potentially as essential to a coming tech era as, say, people with AT&T and Verizon phone plans being able to talk to one another was to an earlier one.

And cold storage, while safer, would seem to undercut what lies at the heart of crypto’s appeal, which is to allow for transfers without the delays and waits of traditional bank transactions.

On social media Wednesday, many showed images of their wallets suddenly displaying zero balances, while others questioned hot wallets. “So you’re telling me storing my entire net worth on a google chrome extension would be considered a bad move?” one wag wrote of Phantom.

But experts say the issue may be more serious than that. Finding solutions, they note, might mean making sacrifices within the goals envisioned by crypto idealists.

“One of the advantages to opening up the banking system this way is the speed and lower barrier to transactions,” said William Callahan III, a former Drug Enforcement Administration special agent who now serves as director of government and strategic affairs for a company called the Blockchain Intelligence Group. “But what these hacks show is we need to take a step back and question that idea of accessibility, since speed is also part of the problem. We need to balance speed with security.”

Still, Callahan said, he believed such shoring-up was possible. “Blockchain bridges need to step up their protection, while maybe consumers need to use more cold storage,” he added.

The need for speed might be diminishing on its own as some people exit cryptocurrency. Bitcoin, a strong barometer of crypto activity, has lost 50 percent of its value in 2022 as investors have shed the asset, though it has seen a rebound from its sub-$19,000 price in June to hover around $23,000 in recent weeks.



Read original article here

Tens of thousands of Sydney residents told to evacuate as rains flood suburbs

An emergency crew rescues two ponies from a flooded area in Milperra, Sydney metropolitan area, Australia July 3, 2022 in this screen grab obtained from a handout video. NSW State Emergency Service/Handout via REUTERS

Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com

Register

  • Third major flood this year for some Sydney suburbs
  • 30,000 New South Wales residents face evacuations
  • Rescue of ship crew underway, military helping stranded families

SYDNEY, July 4 (Reuters) – Fresh evacuation orders were issued for tens of thousands of Sydney residents on Monday after relentless rains triggered floods for the third time this year in some low-lying suburbs.

An intense low-pressure system off Australia’s east coast is forecast to bring heavy rain through Monday across New South Wales after several places in the state were hit with about a month’s worth over the weekend.

Since Sunday, about 30,000 residents in New South Wales state have been told to either evacuate or warned they might receive evacuation orders.

Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com

Register

Frustration swelled in several suburbs in the west of Australia’s largest city after floods submerged homes, farms and bridges.

“It’s just devastating. We are in disbelief,” Camden Mayor Theresa Fedeli said.

“Most of them have just come out of the last flood, getting their homes back in place, their businesses back in place and unfortunately we are saying it is happening again.”

More than 200mm of rain have fallen over many areas, with some hit by as much as 350mm since Saturday. read more

Some areas could approach or exceed the flood levels seen in March 2021, and in March and April this year, the weather bureau warned. The risk of major flooding remained though the intense weather system may weaken later on Monday, it said.

An operation was underway to rescue 21 crew members from a cargo ship, which lost power south of Sydney and risked being swept ashore, local media reported.

“It has been a very difficult time for many months to have this flood event off the back of others. It makes it more challenging,” New South Wales Premier Dominic Perrottet said during a televised media briefing.

Paul O’Neill, a resident from flood-hit Wisemans Ferry, said he was taking food supplies by boat to his stranded family after rising waters cut off access.

“The road collapsed and hasn’t been fixed since the last floods, hasn’t been touched. So now they close our road access and then the ferry, the only way to get home now is by boat,” O’Neill told Reuters.

AUSTRALIA ‘UNDER-PREPARED’

Footage on social media showed petrol stations, homes, cars and street signs partially under water while garbage bins floated down flooded roads. Military vehicles were seen going into flooded streets to evacuate stranded families.

About 100 millimetres (4 inches) of rain could fall in the next 24 hours over a swath of more than 300km (186 miles) along the New South Wales coast from Newcastle to the south of Sydney, the Bureau of Meteorology said.

The weather could trigger flash floods and landslides, with river catchments already near full capacity after the La Nina phenomenon, typically associated with increased rainfall, lashed Australia’s east coast over the last two years.

Climate change is widely believed to be a contributing factor to the frequent severe weather events, the Climate Council said, adding Australia is “under-prepared”.

Federal emergency management minister Murray Watt said climate change must be taken “seriously” due to the frequent occurrence of floods.

“The reality is we are living in a changing climate,” Watt told ABC television.

Bad weather has delayed by 24 hours Monday’s scheduled launch of a NASA rocket from the Arnhem Space Centre in north Australia, operator Equatorial Launch Australia said.

Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com

Register

Reporting by Renju Jose and Jill Gralow; Editing by Sam Holmes, Lincoln Feast and Edwina Gibbs

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Read original article here

Tens of thousands rally against gun violence in Washington, across U.S.

WASHINGTON, June 11 (Reuters) – Tens of thousands of demonstrators descended on Washington and at hundreds of rallies across the United States on Saturday to demand that lawmakers pass legislation aimed at curbing gun violence following last month’s massacre at a Texas elementary school.

In the nation’s capital, organizers with March for Our Lives (MFOL) estimated that 40,000 people assembled at the National Mall near the Washington Monument under occasional light rain. The gun safety group was founded by student survivors of the 2018 massacre at a Parkland, Florida, high school.

Courtney Haggerty, a 41-year-old research librarian from Lawrenceville, New Jersey, traveled to Washington with her 10-year-old daughter, Cate, and 7-year-old son, Graeme.

Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com

Register

Haggerty said the December 2012 school shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, when a gunman killed 26 people, mostly six- and seven-year-olds, came one day after her daughter’s first birthday.

“It left me raw,” she said. “I can’t believe she’s going to be 11, and we’re still doing this.”

Kay Klein, a 65-year-old teacher trainer from Fairfax, Virginia, who retired earlier this month, said Americans should vote out politicians who refuse to take action in November’s midterm elections, when control of Congress will be at stake.

“If we truly care about children and about families, we need to vote,” she said.

‘ABSOLUTELY ABSURD’

A gunman in Uvalde, Texas, killed 19 children and two teachers on May 24, 10 days after another gunman murdered 10 Black people in a Buffalo, New York, grocery store in a racist attack.

The shootings have added new urgency to the country’s ongoing debate over gun violence, though the prospects for federal legislation remain uncertain given staunch Republican opposition to any limits on firearms.

In recent weeks, a bipartisan group of Senate negotiators have vowed to hammer out a deal, though they have yet to reach an agreement. Their effort is focused on relatively modest changes, such as incentivizing states to pass “red flag” laws that allow authorities to keep guns from individuals deemed dangerous.

U.S. President Joe Biden, a Democrat who earlier this month urged Congress to ban assault weapons, expand background checks and implement other measures, said he supported Saturday’s protests. read more

“We are being murdered,” said X Gonzalez, a Parkland survivor and co-founder of MFOL, in an emotional speech alongside survivors of other mass shootings. “You, Congress, have done nothing to prevent it.”

Among other policies, MFOL has called for an assault weapons ban, universal background checks for those trying to purchase guns and a national licensing system, which would register gun owners.

Biden told reporters in Los Angeles that he had spoken several times with Senator Chris Murphy, who is leading the Senate talks, and that negotiators remained “mildly optimistic.”

The Democratic-controlled U.S. House of Representatives on Wednesday passed a sweeping set of gun safety measures, but the legislation has no chance of advancing in the Senate, where Republicans view gun limits as infringing upon the U.S. Constitution’s Second Amendment right to bear arms.

Speakers at the Washington rally included David Hogg, a Parkland survivor and co-founder of MFOL; Becky Pringle and Randi Weingarten, the presidents of the two largest U.S. teachers unions; and Muriel Bowser, the mayor of Washington, D.C.

Two high school students from the Washington suburb of Silver Spring, Maryland – Zena Phillip, 16, and Blain Sirak, 15 – said they had never joined a protest before but felt motivated after the shooting in Texas.

“Just knowing that there’s a possibility that can happen in my own school terrifies me,” Phillip said. “A lot of kids are getting numb to this to the point they feel hopeless.”

Sirak said she backed more gun restrictions and that the issue extended beyond mass shootings to the daily toll of gun violence.

“People are able to get military-grade guns in America,” she said. “It’s absolutely absurd.”

Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com

Register

Reporting by Ted Hesson; Additional reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt in Los Angeles and Makini Brice in Washington; Writing by Joseph Ax; Editing by Aurora Ellis and Daniel Wallis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Read original article here

At the Polish Border, Tens of Thousands of Ukrainian Refugees

MEDYKA, Poland — Cradling her 3-year-old son, who was gravely ill with cancer, the 25-year-old Ukrainian mother staggered into Poland on Friday.

She was now safe from the bombs and rockets unleashed by President Vladimir V. Putin but despondent at being separated from her husband by a Ukrainian order that all able-bodied men stay behind to resist the Russians.

“He is not just my husband but my life and my support,” said Olha Zapotochna, one of the tens of thousands of Ukrainians, nearly all women and children, who have poured into Poland, Hungary and other neighboring countries since Monday. “I understand that our country needs men to fight, but I need him more,” she added, patting the head of her moaning sick child, Arthur.

The exodus from Ukraine gathered pace on Friday as fear spread that the Kremlin intends to impose its will far beyond just the east of the country, the scene of what Mr. Putin claims, with no evidence, is a “genocide” of ethnic Russians.

More than 50,000 Ukrainians have fled the country so far, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi, said on Friday, and the agency believes as many as 100,000 have been displaced.

Poland’s border service said that 29,000 people had arrived from Ukraine on Thursday, and many more on Friday, leading to waits of more than 12 hours at some crossing points. More than 26,000 have fled Ukraine into Moldova, and a further 10,000 into Romania.

Among those fleeing into Poland Friday through a border crossing at Medyka were ethnic Russians like Oxana Aleksova, who were as appalled by the Kremlin’s lies, unprovoked violence and crude propaganda as were their Ukrainian compatriots.

Ms. Aleksova, 49, whose ethnic Ukrainian husband, a retired police officer, stayed behind, escaped into Poland with her 11-year-old daughter after waiting all night in a line of pedestrians and vehicles seeking entry to Poland — a line she said stretched for miles.

Her hometown of Khmelnytskyi, in western Ukraine, had not been hit directly, she said, but Russian bombs had fallen on a military airfield in a nearby town.

Russia’s military, she predicted, “will of course win eventually” because it has so many more soldiers and better equipment than Ukraine. But Mr. Putin’s goal, she added, “is not just to beat Ukraine but to make the whole world afraid of him.”

Whether he succeeds on that score is still an open question. But his implicit threats to use nuclear weapons against any foreign nations that intervene on Ukraine’s behalf have strengthened an already solid consensus among NATO members — even its most hawkish, anti-Russian members, like the Baltics states and Poland — to keep their troops out of Ukraine.

As Ukrainians flowed across the border into Poland, however, the government in Warsaw announced on Friday that a “convoy with ammunition” had flowed in the opposition direction into Ukraine. “We support Ukrainians and we firmly oppose Russian aggression,” Poland’s minister of defense, Mariusz Błaszczak, said.

Also passing into Ukraine were small groups of men who said they were returning home to fight. “We will beat Russia,” shouted a middle-aged returnee as he walked past the Polish border guards toward Ukrainian territory carrying a black duffle bag.

Just behind them was Viktor Dick, a German on his way to Kyiv to try to rescue his pregnant Ukrainian wife and their three children. He looked terrified but said he had to risk the perilous journey to the besieged capital to save his family.

As many as five million Ukrainians could flee into neighboring countries if the war drags on, confronting the European Union — which nearly buckled under a migration crisis in 2015 involving 1.5 million people — with another and possibly far larger influx of foreigners.

But in contrast to the earlier influx and a crisis last year involving would-be refugees traveling through Belarus into Poland and Lithuania, Europe’s most migrant-hostile governments in Poland and Hungary have generally welcomed Ukrainians.

When migrants from the Middle East and Afghanistan tried to sneak across the border from Belarus last year, Polish security forces beat them back with batons. At least a dozen died in the forests that straddle the border.

Refugees arriving from Ukraine, however, have been greeted with welcoming smiles, hot drinks and transport to the nearest railway station. Police officers handed out fruit, doughnuts and sandwiches to Ukrainians camped out in the waiting room.

Unlike the migrants beaten back from the border by Polish guards last year, Ukrainians, who are mostly Christian and white, have a legal right to enter Poland and other European Union countries without visas. Nearly a million Ukrainians already live in Poland.

And Ukrainian suffering at the hands of Russia has stirred sympathy in the formerly communist lands of East and Central Europe, where people have bitter memories of living under Moscow’s yoke.

Poland’s populist right-wing government, headed by the Law and Justice party, was in the vanguard of a drive to resist the European Union’s liberal migration policies in 2015, as was the Hungarian prime minister, Viktor Orban, but it is now organizing reception centers and temporary housing for Ukrainians.

“We will accept as many refugees as will be needed,” the deputy minister of defense, Marcin Ociepa, said on Monday.

Ludmyla Viytovych, who arrived Friday with her two children from Lviv, a city near the Polish border, said she was pleasantly surprised to find Poles so welcoming, even though her hometown has so far been spared the Kremlin’s wrath.

“It is mostly calm now,” she said, adding “but nobody knows what Russia’s next target will be.”

Lviv, Ukraine, long a bastion of Ukrainian patriotic fervor, has become a major staging post for people fleeing the capital, Kyiv, and heading further West into the European Union.

Yet, while Kyiv residents have been pouring westward, young men in the west have flowed in the opposite direction, their bravado and patriotic pride often mixed with deep anxiety about what awaits them if and when they reach the front line.

Framed by the Art Nouveau splendor of Lviv’s central train station, nervous soldiers smoked and women kissed their men goodbye on the platform, as if playing out movie scenes from what, until Monday, had seemed a bygone era.

Just across the border from Lviv, at the railway station in the Polish town of Przemysl, what could well be the last train from Kyiv arrived seven hours late, disgorging around 500 people, mostly women and children, onto a dimly lit platform. Though looking sleek and modern, the train took nearly 24 hours to cover just 350 miles from the Ukrainian capital to the eastern edge of Poland.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has not only plunged Europe into its biggest land war since the end of World War II in 1945 but left European politicians and many ordinary people suddenly feeling strangely out of place and out of time.

Ms. Zapotochna, the mother with the sick child, said she and her husband had decided that she should take their son to safety after Russian missiles destroyed an airport near their home in the town of Ivano-Frankovsk in southwest Ukraine on Monday morning. Her car journey to the Polish border took 28 hours.

“I hope we can go back. I need to go back. This is not my country,” she said, as her weeping mother-in-law, a resident of Poland who greeted her at the border, tried to comfort the sick baby.

“We are still living in the 21st century, I hope,” Ms. Zapotochna said.

Reporting contributed by Marc Santora in Lviv, Ukraine, and Anatol Magdziarz in Warsaw.

Read original article here

Video Game CEOs Made Tens of Millions of Dollars in 2020

Activision-Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick’s salary has been in the news on multiple occasions over the last year. And while he certainly makes significantly more than most, a new report shows that he’s in good company, with other gaming CEOs bringing in tens of millions of dollars per year.

Games One has compiled a rundown of video game executive pay in the year 2020 based on company filings, including salary, bonuses, stock, and other monetary benefits. The report reveals that Bobby Kotick was actually not the highest-earning CEO of 2020 — that prize goes to Robert Antokol, CEO of Israel-based Playtika, which makes free-to-play mobile games. In 2020, Antokol made $372 million in total compensation, while Kotick brought in $154.6 million.

While they were far and away the top earners, other gaming CEOs similarly made piles of money that year. EA CEO Andrew Wilson received $34.7 million in 2020, while Zynga’s Frank Gibeau earned $32 million. Take-Two (which just announced its intention to acquire Zynga) saw its CEO Strauss Zelnick bring in $18 million.

Other notable names on the list include then-GameStop CEO George Sherman’s $7.6 million, Roblox CEO David Baszucki earning $6.8 million, Square Enix CEO Yosuke Matsuda receiving $4.2 million, Nintendo president Shuntaro Furukawa receiving $2.8 million, and Ubisoft CEO Yves Guillemot getting just under one million.

In total, the 42 gaming CEOs earned $842 million in 2020. Notably, these are just CEOs for publicly-traded companies who must disclose CEO pay by law. Privately held companies, such as Valve or Epic, don’t disclose these numbers, so there are likely a number of equally high-paid CEOs missing from this list.

Activision Blizzard Lawsuit Timeline: The Story So Far

For comparison, a handful of companies disclosed their median employee compensation. Activision had the biggest discrepancy between CEO and employee pay, reporting a median employee compensation of $99,100 — basically one dollar for every $1,560 that Kotick earns. GameStop was the second-worst discrepancy, reporting a low, low median employee compensation of $11,033, or one dollar for every $650 Sherman earned in 2020.

Gaming CEO compensation has been under scrutiny in recent years. Kotick’s pay in particular was cut earlier last year after repeated criticism, though he’s still making $875,000 in salary alone before bonuses and other stock benefits. EA similarly cut CEO Andrew Wilson’s pay last year.

Rebekah Valentine is a news reporter for IGN. You can find her on Twitter @duckvalentine.

Thumbnail Image Credit: Scott Olson/Getty Images



Read original article here

Tens of thousands march against Belgium’s COVID measures

BRUSSELS (AP) — Ten of thousands of people marched through central Brussels on Sunday to protest against reinforced COVID-19 measures that the government has imposed to counter the latest spike in coronavirus cases.

Many in the huge demonstration that police estimated at 35,000 people also protested against the strong advice to get vaccinated and any moves to impose mandatory shots.

Shouting “Freedom, freedom, freedom,” and singing the anti-fascist song “Bella Ciao,” protesters lined up behind a huge banner saying “Together for Freedom.”

Amid the crowd, signs varied from far-right insignia to the rainbow coalition flags of the LGBT community.

There were smoke bombs and firecrackers, but there was no noteworthy violence when the first marchers reached the end point outside European Union headquarters.

Over the past several days, there have been marches in many European nations as one government after another tightened measures. Dutch police arrested more than 30 people during unrest in The Hague and other towns in the Netherlands on Saturday, following much worse violence the previous night.

___

Follow AP coverage of the pandemic at https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-pandemic

Read original article here

CNN Investigation: Tens of Millions of Filthy, Used Medical Gloves Imported Into the US

Nearby is a plastic bowl, filled with blue dye and a few gloves. Thai officials say migrant laborers had been trying to make the gloves look new again, when Thai health authorities raided the facility in December.

There are many more warehouses just like it still in operation today in Thailand — trying to cash in on the demand for medical-grade nitrile gloves, which exploded with the coronavirus pandemic. And they’re boxing up millions of these sub-standard gloves for export to the United States, and countries around the world amid a global shortage that will take years to ease.

A months-long CNN investigation has found that tens of millions of counterfeit and second-hand nitrile gloves have reached the United States, according to import records and distributors who bought the gloves — and that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Criminal investigations are underway by the authorities in the US and Thailand.

Experts describe an industry riddled with fraud, with one of them — Douglas Stein — telling CNN that nitrile gloves are the “most dangerous commodity on Earth right now.”

“There’s an enormous amount of bad product coming in,” Stein says, “an endless stream of filthy, second-hand and substandard gloves coming into the US of which federal authorities, it seems, are only now beginning to understand the enormous scale.”

Yet, despite the potential risk to frontline healthcare workers and patients, US authorities have struggled to get a handle on the illicit trade — in part because import regulations for protective medical equipment were temporarily suspended at the height of the pandemic — and remain suspended today.

In February and March this year one US company warned two federal agencies — Customs and Border Protection and the Food and Drug Administration — that it had received shipments filled with substandard and visibly soiled gloves from one company in Thailand.

And yet the Thai company managed to ship tens of millions more gloves in the following months, some arriving as recently as July.

The FDA told CNN it could not comment on individual cases but said it has taken “a number of steps to find and stop those selling unapproved products by leveraging our experience investigating, examining and reviewing medical products, both at the border and within domestic commerce.”

A surge in demand

In early 2020, demand for personal protective equipment (PPE) shot through the roof as the coronavirus pandemic took hold around the world. And prices for nitrile gloves stayed high. Medical grade nitrile gloves are commonly used by doctors and healthcare professionals in patient examinations. The FDA bans powdered latex from being used in healthcare, while lower-quality vinyl gloves are more common in industrial settings and food handling.

The gloves, produced almost entirely in south and east Asia, rely on a finite supply of natural rubber, highly-specialized factories and niche manufacturing expertise. Ramping up supply couldn’t happen quickly and production from trusted, established brands was spoken for years in advance.

Governments and hospital systems scrambled to get what they needed — and dozens of shady companies looking to turn a quick profit saw an opportunity.

Late last year Tarek Kirschen, a Miami-based businessman, ordered about $2 million of gloves from a Thai-based company called Paddy the Room, which he then sold to a US distributor.

“We start getting phone calls from clients completely upset, and you know, yelling and screaming at us saying, ‘Hey, you screwed us,'” he recalls.

Kirschen got to see the product for himself when a second container arrived in Miami.

“These were reused gloves. They were washed, recycled,” he told CNN. “Some of them were dirty. Some of them had bloodstains. Some of them had markers on them with dates from two years ago… I couldn’t believe my eyes.”

Kirschen says he refunded the money to his customers, put the gloves in a landfill and alerted the FDA in February 2021.

He says none of the gloves he ordered were used in medical settings, but a CNN analysis of import records show that other US distributors acquired nearly 200 million gloves from Paddy the Room during the pandemic.

It’s unclear what happened to those gloves after they entered the country.

CNN attempted to reach all of the importers. The vast majority did not respond but two did say the shipments were substandard and the gloves weren’t even nitrile. One company, Uweport, told CNN they were unable to re-sell them to medical companies, as planned. Instead, they were sold at a lower price to distributors that supply American food processing plants, hotels and restaurants.

The other company, US Liberty LLC had a very similar experience with Paddy the Room. It says it was also bilked by a different Vietnemese company which sent them “gloves with holes, with stains, ripped, and in different shades and colours,” company President Firas Jarrar told CNN.

Stein, who has been buying PPE from Asia for decades, has been tracking the countless frauds and scams across Southeast Asia since the pandemic began.

“It’s ridiculously nefarious at every link in the chain,” he told CNN.

Stein, who has built up a following of buyers and sellers on LinkedIn, often finds himself counseling people who lost millions of dollars to nitrile glove fraud and trying to talk people out of signing deals that are clearly too good to be true. He says the discounts on offer are often impossibly steep.

Louis Ziskin is one US entrepreneur who was tempted to buy. “We saw dollar signs. We also saw we had legitimate medical customers who were literally begging for this stuff,” he told CNN.

His company, AirQueen, went ahead with a $2.7 million order from Paddy the Room, via a third party also based in Asia. All paid 100% up front.

Ziskin is an ex-convict who spent more than a decade behind bars after he was caught smuggling the drug ecstasy into the US in 2000.

But in the last decade he’s become a successful tech entrepreneur, whose business has even been profiled in Forbes magazine.

But then he stepped into the murky world of nitrile gloves.

An independent inspection carried out at a Los Angeles warehouse and verified by CNN confirmed that most of the gloves he bought were not nitrile, but lower-grade latex or vinyl, and many were very obviously soiled and second-hand.

Ziskin says there was no way he could pass them off to hospitals in good conscience.

“It’s a total safety issue… to me the fact that these companies were never blacklisted is shocking,” he told CNN.

Perhaps that is because the scam is an elaborate one. Paddy the Room sent Ziskin pristine independent inspection reports purporting to show the gloves in the shipment were high quality. The documents though, were fake. The inspection company whose report had been falsified confirmed to CNN that the reports were forgeries.

Like Kirschen, Ziskin raised the alarm with US authorities shortly after he received his shipment of bad gloves early this year, contacting both the FDA and the CBP. Yet, import records showed the warnings seemed to make no difference. Since Ziskin’s written warning to the CBP in February, 28 containers totaling more than 80 million gloves shipped by Paddy the Room entered the US.

The flow of sub-standard gloves into the US was also made easier by the FDA’s temporary suspension of import regulations.

“There was just no other answer. There was no way to meet the demand,” explained Stein. “But that opened the floodgates for all the nefarious behavior.”

In a statement, the FDA told CNN that companies were only allowed to import under the relaxed rules “as long as the gloves conform to the consensus standards and labeling cited in the guidance and where the gloves do not create an undue risk.”

But few physical checks are made on gloves or any other items arriving into American ports, and any medical gloves that were fraudulent or even contaminated would likely not be discovered until they arrived at their destination.

In August, the FDA did finally send out an alert to all its port staff that shipments from Paddy the Room should be subject to detention without physical examination.

That was five months after Kirschen and Ziskin raised the alarm.

The FDA would not comment on its investigation into Paddy the Room, but Department of Homeland Security (DHS) officials confirmed there is an ongoing criminal investigation into the company.

The CBP told CNN it had seized some 40 million counterfeit face masks and hundreds of thousands of other PPE items. It says it has seized some shipments of gloves, but it has not tracked the volume of seizures.

CNN asked the DHS if the system had failed given the number of second-hand gloves making it into the American supply chain.

“I don’t know that that’s the right way to phrase the question,” said DHS Investigations Special Operations Agent Mike Rose. “I think all of us would love to get to a point that not a single counterfeit dangerous good entered the US — and I think we’re working towards that.”

Last spring, at the outset of the pandemic, the DHS launched what it called Operation Stolen Promise to crack down specifically on counterfeit PPE, which Rose says has now made more than 2,000 seizures of Covid-related treatments and PPE.

“I think DHS has been a model around the world for how best to coordinate efforts among different agencies to really stop the import, the transactions and all the other surrounding criminal activity around Covid,” Rose said.

Bangkok raids

The Thai FDA has struggled to keep up with the fraudulent trade in nitrile gloves.

When its agents first raided Paddy the Room last December, they found piles of garbage bags filled with loose gloves — of different colors, materials and quality. Workers at the warehouse were stuffing the old gloves into new, counterfeit Sri Trang boxes branded SriTrang — a well-known and legitimate gloves producer in Thailand. SriTrang told CNN it does not do business with Paddy the Room.

Ziskin ended up with thousands of boxes of those counterfeit SriTrang gloves — most bearing the company logo in Thai.

According to Doug Stein, the PPE expert, gloves shipped to the US would never be put in boxes labeled in a foreign language. That alone should have set off alarm bells, he said.

The Thai FDA arrested the owner of the warehouse but was unable to bring charges against the tenant — a Hong Kong resident, according to the Thai FDA.

But the raid didn’t close down Paddy the Room. The Deputy Secretary-General of the Thai FDA Supattra Boonserm told CNN that months later her agency raided a similar facility.

“They just moved to another location, to another warehouse,” she said. “And why is that? Because the demand for gloves is still high. There are still customers waiting out there,” she told CNN.

Paddy the Room and its partner company have not responded to CNN’s requests for comment.

The Thai FDA says it has carried out at least 10 raids in recent months and seized substandard and used gloves being repackaged into counterfeit nitrile boxes. Some raids find workers scrubbing used gloves by hand in wash bowls and dyeing them with food coloring.

“It may be too slow to dry them hanging up, so they would put them into a dryer, literally a laundry dryer,” Boonserm explained. She suspects many used gloves are collected from China or Indonesia and shipped to Thailand to be washed, dried and re-packed.

“In simple terms, it’s fraud,” Boonserm says.

“Under this outbreak situation, the demand is enormous both from hospitals and the general public. The volume of illegal gloves we have found is enormous.”

Doug Stein says given the scale of the illicit trade, he thinks it likely that some gloves have ended up in a medical setting. But it’s unclear if any of these fraudulent, re-used gloves have harmed any US health-care worker or patient.

Boonserm says her agency thinks there is a network of corrupt individuals and companies in Thailand working together to make a profit from the global clamor for nitrile gloves. One of those companies is SkyMed, a brand run by a former Thai military officer. Boxes bearing the SkyMed label were found in the raid of Paddy the Room in December.

“SkyMed, is for sure fake,” Boonserm says.

According to Boonserm, the company has an import license to bring in medical gloves made in Vietnam, but records show SkyMed has never imported medical gloves to Thailand, nor does the company manufacture its own gloves.

SkyMed did not respond to repeated requests for comment for this story.

The extent of fraud in the medical glove industry has driven many international buyers to drastic measures to recoup their money.

Louis Ziskin decided to go to Thailand in an effort to recover his company’s lost $2.7 million, but things quickly went wrong.

Ziskin and several others were arrested and charged with assault and kidnapping after a confrontation in a Bangkok restaurant.

Ziskin says he wasn’t there and strenuously denied the charges.

“I’m going to see this through to the very end,” he vowed. “Am I going to get my money back for the company? Most likely not. Are we bringing a light to this to where hopefully, the United States can get up off the bench and stop it? Yeah. If that’s what justice is, then that’s what my hope is.”

After Thai police missed their deadline to submit evidence in the case, Ziskin was allowed to leave Thailand and flew home to Los Angeles. Thai police tell CNN the investigation is not closed.

Others connected to the incident are still facing trial in Thailand. All have denied the charges against them.

On July 27, the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) cleared out Ziskin’s LA warehouse, seizing 70,000 boxes as evidence in their investigation into Paddy the Room, about five months after he first blew the whistle.

The great unknown is how many million more sub-standard nitrile gloves may be stacked in warehouses at US ports.

Doug Stein believes the fraud may amount to billions of dollars.

“It just became this dark, dark underground,” he says, “where fear meets greed.”

EDITOR’S NOTE: Do you recognize any of the brands of gloves mentioned in this story or have you used nitrile gloves that seem to be bad quality or even second-hand? If so, CNN would like to hear from you. Please click on this page to get in touch.

Read original article here

US Coronavirus: ‘Every one of those deaths is unnecessary,’ expert says of rising Covid-19 death toll as tens of millions remain unvaccinated

Merck and Ridgeback Biotherapeutics said Friday that they created an antiviral pill that can reduce risk of Covid-19 hospitalization and death by 50%, and Merck said it will seek emergency use authorization from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for its molnupiravir medication “as soon as possible.”

“We’ll be able to prescribe this to folks. They’ll take a five-day course and hopefully be able to stay home, not come in for an intravenous infusion and keep folks out of the hospital. So, it’s really very promising news,” Dr. Jonathan Reiner, CNN medical analyst and professor of medicine and surgery at George Washington University, told CNN’s Pamela Brown Saturday.

But Reiner noted that full immunization of the country — the best method for beating back the pandemic — will not happen due to resistance from some, and a substantial number of Americans have died since late February as vaccine access began to expand.

“We’ve lost 700,000 Americans now and fully 200,000 of those folks have died since vaccines have been available almost to everyone in this country, and every one of those deaths is unnecessary. So even though the news is great for this antiviral agent, really the message that people need to receive is ‘get vaccinated.’ No one needs to die from this virus,” he said.

Nearly 56% of all Americans and around 65% of those ages 12 and up who are eligible are fully vaccinated, according to data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

As progress slowly moves forward nationwide with the rate of inoculations, tens of millions of unvaccinated Americans remain at higher risk for Covid-19.

Different parts of the country continue to have varying levels of success with vaccination efforts. Fifteen states have yet to fully vaccinate more than half of their residents, according to CDC data: Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, West Virginia and Wyoming.

The four states that are currently using more than 40% of their hospital ICU beds for Covid-19 patients are on that list, according to Saturday data from the US Department of Health and Human Services: Idaho, Wyoming, West Virginia and Georgia.

West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice on Wednesday urged residents of his state to do their part to turn things around. “I keep reminding everybody — all across this wonderful state — that the way we absolutely curb this and stop this is get vaccinated,” he said.

While much of the focus from health experts and officials remains on new inoculations that will help lower hospitalization rates, booster shots for some who were earlier fully vaccinated by the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine are gaining traction.

About 4.74 million people have received an additional dose — or booster — since August 13, CDC data shows, which is a marked increase from less than two weeks ago. The number of recipients stood at around 2.2 million on September 20.

People ages 65 and older, people at high risk of severe disease and people whose jobs put them at risk of infection may get an additional dose.

Covid-19 mitigation efforts continue to help children

The more contagious Delta variant has contributed to more Covid-19 infections in children than when compared to the onset of the pandemic, which is of greater note since those under the age of 12 cannot yet be vaccinated.

Recent studies, however, have shown that mitigation measures are still an effective tool in lowering infections.

Covid-19 protocols at summer camps kept many from contracting Covid-19, and outbreaks increased when those safety measures weren’t taken, according to two studies published in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report on Friday.

One study compared the number of infections at camps in Louisiana since 2020 and saw a 31-fold increase in cases from last year to this year.

Last year, there were only two outbreaks in the camps studied in Louisiana. There were no vaccines then, but there was a mask mandate in place and camps used other mitigation measures. This year, the camps saw 28 outbreaks that involved 321 cases among 2,988 campers and staff.

While there was a vaccine this year, the difference may have been that Louisiana dropped its mask mandate and “apparent underutilization of preventative measures,” one report said. The Delta variant was also in wide circulation in the state in 2021.

Measures including “vaccination of all eligible adults and adolescents, wearing masks indoors, regular screening testing, physical distancing and cohorting, and increasing ventilation can help prevent transmission of SARS-CoV-2 in settings with youths who cannot be vaccinated,” the study said.

A second study looked at the number of infections among more than 7,000 campers and staff members in several states from June to August this year. The camps used multiple prevention strategies including masks, regular testing, podding, physical distancing and hand hygiene, and had a 93% vaccination rate among those who were eligible.

The camps had only nine Covid-19 cases, the study found, and there were no secondary infections.

“These findings highlight important guiding principles for school and youth-based Covid-19 prevention protocols,” the study said.

People with disabilities had more issues accessing vaccines, study finds

While vaccine hesitancy remains a significant barrier in curbing the pandemic, other difficulties exist for those who want to be inoculated.

People with a disability in the US were less likely than those without disabilities to be vaccinated against Covid-19, even though they report less hesitancy and are disproportionately vulnerable to hospitalization or death from Covid-19, according to a new analysis.

People with a disability aren’t any more hesitant to get a Covid-19 vaccine than those without a disability and were more often likely to report that they would “definitely” get vaccinated. However, they reported more issues in accessing the vaccine, the analysis published in the CDC’s weekly report suggests.

Of those who reported difficulties, they had the hardest time getting an appointment online. They also reported having a hard time getting to a vaccination site. Other obstacles included hours at vaccination sites that didn’t work with their schedules, and not knowing where to get the vaccine.

“Reducing barriers to scheduling and making vaccination sites more accessible might improve vaccination coverage among persons with disabilities,” the report said.

Among more than 56,000 people who responded in CDC phone interviews from the end of May until the end of June, about 5,000 reported having some form of disability. Earlier studies suggest a higher number of people have at least one disability — about 15% of American adults. A disability in this case included anyone who said they had difficulty in seeing, hearing, walking, remembering, making decisions or communicating.

People with disabilities are more vulnerable to Covid-19, in part because they are likely to have a chronic condition that can make Covid-19 severe and are more likely to have health care access issues.

CNN’s Jen Christensen, Shawn Nottingham, Melissa Alonso and Aya Elamroussi contributed to this report.

Read original article here

The Ultimate News Site