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Hundreds of Fish Species, Including Many That Humans Eat, Are Consuming Plastic – EcoWatch

By Alexandra McInturf and Matthew Savoca

Trillions of barely visible pieces of plastic are floating in the world's oceans, from surface waters to the deep seas. These particles, known as microplastics, typically form when larger plastic objects such as shopping bags and food containers break down.

Researchers are concerned about microplastics because they are minuscule, widely distributed and easy for wildlife to consume, accidentally or intentionally. We study marine science and animal behavior, and wanted to understand the scale of this problem. In a newly published study that we conducted with ecologist Elliott Hazen, we examined how marine fish including species consumed by humans are ingesting synthetic particles of all sizes.

In the broadest review on this topic that has been carried out to date, we found that, so far, 386 marine fish species are known to have ingested plastic debris, including 210 species that are commercially important. But findings of fish consuming plastic are on the rise. We speculate that this could be happening both because detection methods for microplastics are improving and because ocean plastic pollution continues to increase.

It's not news that wild creatures ingest plastic. The first scientific observation of this problem came from the stomach of a seabird in 1969. Three years later, scientists reported that fish off the coast of southern New England were consuming tiny plastic particles.

Since then, well over 100 scientific papers have described plastic ingestion in numerous species of fish. But each study has only contributed a small piece of a very important puzzle. To see the problem more clearly, we had to put those pieces together.

We did this by creating the largest existing database on plastic ingestion by marine fish, drawing on every scientific study of the problem published from 1972 to 2019. We collected a range of information from each study, including what fish species it examined, the number of fish that had eaten plastic and when those fish were caught. Because some regions of the ocean have more plastic pollution than others, we also examined where the fish were found.

For each species in our database, we identified its diet, habitat and feeding behaviors for example, whether it preyed on other fish or grazed on algae. By analyzing this data as a whole, we wanted to understand not only how many fish were eating plastic, but also what factors might cause them to do so. The trends that we found were surprising and concerning.

Leopard sharks swim past plastic debris in shallow water off southern California. Ralph Pace / CC BY-ND

Our research revealed that marine fish are ingesting plastic around the globe. According to the 129 scientific papers in our database, researchers have studied this problem in 555 fish species worldwide. We were alarmed to find that more than two-thirds of those species had ingested plastic.

One important caveat is that not all of these studies looked for microplastics. This is likely because finding microplastics requires specialized equipment, like microscopes, or use of more complex techniques. But when researchers did look for microplastics, they found five times more plastic per individual fish than when they only looked for larger pieces. Studies that were able to detect this previously invisible threat revealed that plastic ingestion was higher than we had originally anticipated.

Our review of four decades of research indicates that fish consumption of plastic is increasing. Just since an international assessment conducted for the United Nations in 2016, the number of marine fish species found with plastic has quadrupled.

Similarly, in the last decade alone, the proportion of fish consuming plastic has doubled across all species. Studies published from 2010-2013 found that an average of 15% of the fish sampled contained plastic; in studies published from 2017-2019, that share rose to 33%.

We think there are two reasons for this trend. First, scientific techniques for detecting microplastics have improved substantially in the past five years. Many of the earlier studies we examined may not have found microplastics because researchers couldn't see them.

Second, it is also likely that fish are actually consuming more plastic over time as ocean plastic pollution increases globally. If this is true, we expect the situation to worsen. Multiple studies that have sought to quantify plastic waste project that the amount of plastic pollution in the ocean will continue to increase over the next several decades.

While our findings may make it seem as though fish in the ocean are stuffed to the gills with plastic, the situation is more complex. In our review, almost one-third of the species studied were not found to have consumed plastic. And even in studies that did report plastic ingestion, researchers did not find plastic in every individual fish. Across studies and species, about one in four fish contained plastics a fraction that seems to be growing with time. Fish that did consume plastic typically had only one or two pieces in their stomachs.

In our view, this indicates that plastic ingestion by fish may be widespread, but it does not seem to be universal. Nor does it appear random. On the contrary, we were able to predict which species were more likely to eat plastic based on their environment, habitat and feeding behavior.

For example, fishes such as sharks, grouper and tuna that hunt other fishes or marine organisms as food were more likely to ingest plastic. Consequently, species higher on the food chain were at greater risk.

We were not surprised that the amount of plastic that fish consumed also seemed to depend on how much plastic was in their environment. Species that live in ocean regions known to have a lot of plastic pollution, such as the Mediterranean Sea and the coasts of East Asia, were found with more plastic in their stomachs.

This is not just a wildlife conservation issue. Researchers don't know very much about the effects of ingesting plastic on fish or humans. However, there is evidence that that microplastics and even smaller particles called nanoplastics can move from a fish's stomach to its muscle tissue, which is the part that humans typically eat. Our findings highlight the need for studies analyzing how frequently plastics transfer from fish to humans, and their potential effects on the human body.

Our review is a step toward understanding the global problem of ocean plastic pollution. Of more than 20,000 marine fish species, only roughly 2% have been tested for plastic consumption. And many reaches of the ocean remain to be examined. Nonetheless, what's now clear to us is that "out of sight, out of mind" is not an effective response to ocean pollution especially when it may end up on our plates.

Alexandra McInturf is a PhD Candidate in Animal Behavior at the University of California, Davis. Matthew Savoca is a Postdoctoral researcher at Stanford University.

Disclosure statement: Alexandra McInturf is affiliated with The Ethogram. Matthew Savoca receives funding from The National Geographic Society and the National Science Foundation.

Reposted with permission from The Conversation.

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Hundreds of Fish Species, Including Many That Humans Eat, Are Consuming Plastic - EcoWatch

For a writer, patience is a pre-requisite: Jayant Swamy – The Sunday Guardian Live – The Sunday Guardian

In an interview with G20, author Jayant Swamy talks about the rituals of writing, and his recent novel Family Secrets, which is a fictional story of two half-brothers who face-off under contrasting circumstances. Excerpts:Q. Why do you write novels?A. Writing has always been part of my life. I always have several stories swirling in my head. I constantly inhabit the world of imagination and intuition filled with what-ifs and why-nots. Writing novels offers me the opportunity to harvest this gift, factualise fantasy and fictionalise fact.I am a keen observer and interpreter of human behavior and a soft skills trainer. I like to channelise my passion for behavioural sciences into creating characters that are memorable and writing emotional scenes brimming with human drama.Q. Tell us something about your latest novel. What is your dream star cast for Family Secrets?A. My second novel Family Secrets, a corporate thriller and a dynastic drama is the story of two warring half-brothers and their relationships. It was released in October 2020. Published by Vishwakarma Publications, the cover is designed by my literary agency, The Book Bakers.Siddhartha, the English teacher-turned-conman seeks justice for a missed inheritance. The powerful business tycoon Abhimanyu, the illegitimate son of lawyer Vikramaditya, is the solitary owner of the family fortune. A series of face-offs between them, the cleverly-planned cons of the one, thwarted by the boardroom-like moves of the other make the book a corporate thriller.Siddharthas loving relationship with his theater-artiste wife Sadhana, Abhimanyus reverence for his blue-blooded mother Rani Maa, and the emotional tussle he faces in accepting his newfound son Rahul, provide the elements of human drama.I would love to see Akshay Kumar as the easygoing Siddhartha and Ajay Devgn as the cold and calculating Abhimanyu. Dimple Kapadia as the majestic Rani Maa, Anushka Sharma as the versatile Sadhana and upcoming actor Vikrant Massey as the emotion-filled Rahul would make for a dream cast. Lawyer Vikramaditya the father of both Siddhartha and Abhimanyu appears in a flashback Manoj Bajpai in a Special Appearance would be the icing on the cake.Q. Describe your writing process. What are your writing rituals? A. My home office is my writing haven. A confirmed owl in my circadian rhythm, I prefer to write late into the night. I listen to music when I write I cannot work in silence. I clearly know my endgame, start with an outline, and keep writing accordingly until my characters reach a critical velocity my characters then take over from me, writing their own stories. I often have stretches of time when the creativity does not flow. I have learnt to use them to edit and reorganise what I have written previously.Q. Your biggest learnings as a writer?A. Patience, patience, patience. That is my biggest learning from the umpteen rejections I had received for my debut novel. Not to take rejection personally and continue doing what I believe in, that is an attitude I quickly learnt to cultivate.When opportunity meets preparation, success happens, that is the other learning. Marketing my book is in my control. A readers decision to spend their money and buy my book, is not! Marketing efforts can definitely influence that decision but cannot guarantee the sale, right?Q. Describe some of your high points and low points as a writer. A. When my first novel Colours in the Spectrum was published, my heart sang This is what I am born to do. That was a memorable moment. I got to relive it when my second novel Family Secrets was published. Higher points as a writer are yet to come! There are several low points I have faced, continue facing. They teach me valuable lessons, make me more compassionate.Q. What is your advice to budding writers?A. You are the CEO of your own life. Exercise the power of individual choice.Write from the heart. Never sell your soul. If you dont enjoy writing, dont become a writer. Be authentic. Dont write what you consider to be hurtful or harmful. Be innovative. Develop your own signature style.Q. What message would you like to send to your readers?A. I write to express myself, and share my perspectives with a larger audience. You may like it or you may hate it. After all its only a story. You may or may not agree with what I have written. In fact, I wouldnt want everybody to agree with everything I write. Sit back, relax, read and enjoy. Pen me a heartfelt review if you can. That will be precious. Family Secrets is as much a corporate thriller as it is a family drama.

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For a writer, patience is a pre-requisite: Jayant Swamy - The Sunday Guardian Live - The Sunday Guardian

Tampa poet Yuki Jackson reflects on the revolutionary and complicated concept of sharing and respecting space – Creative Loafing Tampa

yukijacksonpoet/Instagram

It is a revolutionary idea to share a space, which first requires asking permission. I notice how much of human behavior is to not respect the space of who you want to engage with or rather, take from. We take on this invasive tendency also in the form of encroaching and taking advantage of cultures, commodifying their lives, products and resources, with this whole sense of ownership, which seems to be the crux of white supremacy as well as general masculine energy.

Historically, the space we inhabit is of a woman. It starts from when we are in the womb, quite literally the first space we occupy. Is it any wonder that the deep disregard and violence towards women occurs as a perpetual expression of this first impulse we all possess as humans to occupy a woman then rip her apart.

Like rapper Chael Blinyas BLK Hole lyric, cause off rip, she got ripped off, the idea of a supreme male God who single-handedly created everything is a direct act of erasure on the role of the feminine side of life and is the root of disrespect towards women. In plain sight humanity has failed to cite its source.

I have been hosting a virtual poetry workshop series over the past couple months, the most recent installment themed Making Sense of Space. Together we explored space in different aspectsouter space, as in black holes and NASA, which seems to come foremost in our minds when we consider space, as well as space in terms of where we occupy and the space created when we experience loss in our lives.

This idea of the infinite void can feel at once hopeless and hopeful. While black holes could delete the universe, they also store information like the ultimate hard drive, they are like holograms in that everything inside is projected on its event horizon (Why Black Holes Could Delete the UniverseThe Information Paradox) We are projections directed towards an endless wall, a moving picture whirring constant, so we turn as much as we can, spinning the wheel, wondering how did we get here. And like the drive-in movie experience, we may discover that arriving in a space, the act of coming, is best when involving both of us.

Projection No.2 - First Showing

I got in trouble for letting the visitors write on my walls

we lived in Ichi-ban Tower which means first if it's all in order

the aftermath of when my mother invited people over to discuss world peace I should have watched the other kids closer

my room, my responsibility

a mistake I would be blamed and punished with a ruler measured in whats used to count distance everywhere but where I live

Ive been told Im in my own little world

an attempt to exhibit our first graffiti,watch how we leave our marks without apology

it's possible I may have even encouraged it

if we reflect the universe, it is her space and you enter

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Tampa poet Yuki Jackson reflects on the revolutionary and complicated concept of sharing and respecting space - Creative Loafing Tampa

The science of love The Stute – The Stute

Flushed cheeks, sweaty palms, increased libido, giddiness, or the need to cuddle up with someone special? Love has always felt like an inexplicable, mysterious force rooted in the heart. Its dictated centuries of human life and culture on Earth. In an instant, you can find your thoughts and impulses being influenced by the actions and existence of another individual.

But I assure you that thanks to science, one can quickly categorize the complicated concoction of chemicals that comprise our cravings for companionship.

According to American anthropologist and human behavior researcher Dr. Helen Fisher, the process of falling in love can be split into several stages: lust, attraction, and attachment. Each stage is identified by a different set of hormones and signals set off in your brain.

Lust has an evolutionary basis: our innate need to reproduce. Sex hormones, such as testosterone and estrogen, are produced by a small region located at the base of the brain, called the hypothalamus. Along with an increase in sex drive, the release of these hormones is capable of affecting your body temperature, appetite, sleep, and growth.

The next stage of love, known for being the honeymoon and crazed and cant-think-of-anything-but point of a relationship, is centered on attraction and passion. Dopamine and norepinephrine are neurotransmitters that flood your brain, acting as a chemical messenger between neurons, heightening your attention and producing feelings of bliss and excitement. Dopamine is especially known for playing a major role as a motivational component in reward-based behavior, which is why couples at this stage often desire to focus intently on their relationship.

Coupled with rising levels of dopamine and norepinephrine is a striking decrease in the amount of serotonin, a key hormone necessary for stabilizing moods, and promoting feelings of happiness. A lack of serotonin can ultimately impact an individuals well-being, causing depression, anxiety, or trouble sleeping.

In long-lasting relationships, the final stage of the process may lead to an increase in attachment, as infatuation dwindles with time. In a preliminary study by researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, the release of the hormone oxytocin during this phase is reported to be associated with the ability to maintain healthy interpersonal relationships and healthy psychological boundaries with other people. Additionally, your endorphins may kick in, providing you with a sense of security and stress relief.

Despite sciences ability to help us explain all these sensations that make up love, there is still much speculation regarding the reasons we are attracted towards certain people rather than others and why love fades quickly or even lasts as long as it does. It would be a mistake to conclude that this animalistic impulse is in any way simple.

So perhaps for those of us lucky to experience some form of it this Valentines Day, whether it be romantic, familial, or selfward, one can learn to revel in loves intricate interplay within our minds and draw comfort from its chaos.

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The science of love The Stute - The Stute

2021 Reed Awards honor writing about the Southeast’s fragile coast – Southern Environmental Law Center

Two writers who have delved into the past and present challenges facing treasured places on the Southeast coast will receive SELCs 2021 Phillip D. Reed Environmental Writing Awards, presented March 25 during this years Virginia Festival of the Book.

The Reed Awards honor the late Phillip D. Reed, a distinguished attorney, committed environmental activist, and a founding trustee of SELC, by celebrating some of the best environmental writing on the South.

In the book category, former Georgia state legislator Paul Bolster will receive the Reed Award for Saving the Georgia Coast: A Political History of the Coastal Marshlands Protection Act. In the journalism category, Tony Bartelme of The Post and Courier in Charleston will receive the Reed Award for his in-depth reporting on South Carolinas coastal environment, including communities where the damaging impacts of climate change are happening now.

The featured speaker for the Reed Award presentation will be Lulu Miller, co-host of WNYC Studios Radiolab and author of the widely acclaimed Why Fish Dont Exist, a nonfiction scientific thriller and memoir. The free, online event will be at 2pm Eastern Time.

To register, visit http://www.southernenvironment.org/reedaward.

In Saving the Georgia Coast, published by the University of Georgia Press, Paul Bolster brings to life the unlikely coalition of local residents, wealthy landowners, hunters and anglers, garden club members, courageous politicians and others who came together more than 50 years ago to defend Georgias unspoiled coastal marshlands. At the same time, he traces the intricate legislative maneuvers that resulted in passage of the 1970 Coastal Marshlands Protection Act, a law that remains the most comprehensive protection of marshlands along the Atlantic seaboard.

Bolster, who served a diverse Atlanta district in the Georgia House of Representatives for 12 years, does more than look back at this landmark legislative achievement. He also examines the policy challenges facing the Georgia coast today, among them how to address unrelenting development pressures and how to deal with rising sea levels and other impacts of a warming planet. He continues to follow environmental legislation in the state capitol and feels that lawmakers could look to the lessons from 50 years ago as a guide to protecting Georgias fragile coast today.

A freelance writer and historian, Bolster holds a Ph.D. degree in history from the University of Georgia and a law degree from Georgia State University School of Law. He taught American history at Clark Atlanta University for 14 years and has worked as a lobbyist for the Georgia Hospital Association and the American Hospital Association. A tireless advocate for affordable housing, he ran a Health Care for the Homeless program in Atlanta and served for three years on Governor Nathan Deals Council on Criminal Justice Reform.

Tony Bartelme, a special projects reporter for The Post and Courier, is being recognized in part for his stories from the Rising Waters Project, a series documenting how the accelerating forces of climate change are affecting Charleston and the South Carolina Lowcountry. Bartelme explains not only the science behind wetter hurricanes, intense rain bomb events and flooding high tides, but also the policy issues they raise and how they are making life harder for many South Carolinians. In other pieces recognized by this years award, Bartelme displays a gift for linking science with sense of place. These include a story tracing the human and natural history of South Carolinas Santee Delta, and another on the quest by researchers to learn more about an elusive and rapidly disappearing marshland bird, the eastern black rail.

A graduate of Northwestern Universitys Medill School of Journalism, Bartelme is a three-time finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and has won some of the highest honors in journalism. He was awarded a prestigious Harvard University Nieman Fellowship in 2010. His investigative reporting has exposed government corruption and has explored subjects ranging from changes in ocean plankton to the global shortage of doctors. His latest book, A Surgeon in the Village: An American Doctor Teaches Brain Surgery in Africa, was published by Beacon Press.

Lulu Miller is a Peabody Award-winning science journalist who fell hard for radio when she joined the staff of WNYC Studios Radiolab, initially as a volunteer. She returned to the show as co-host this past year. She is also co-founder ofNPRsInvisibilia, a show about the invisible forces that shape human behavior. Her book Why Fish Dont Exist has been hailed as a wondrous debut and was listed among the best books of 2020 by The Washington Post, NPR, Chicago Tribune and Smithsonian. It follows the life of taxonomist David Starr Jordanthe first president of Stanford University and a proponent of the eugenics movementand reveals both the triumphs and the dark side of his relentless search for order in a chaotic world. Her book is also a deeply personal story about how to go on when everything seems lost. Miller is a graduate of Swarthmore College and earned an MFA in fiction writing from the University of Virginia.

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2021 Reed Awards honor writing about the Southeast's fragile coast - Southern Environmental Law Center

Bill Gates Has Always Sought Out New Reading Recommendations – The New York Times

Which subjects do you wish more authors would write about?

Im surprised more books havent been written about how the insights were gaining from big data could be used for good. I read Everybody Lies, by Seth Stephens-Davidowitz, last summer, which is all about what internet data and especially search engines reveal about human behavior. (Did you know that people who have pancreatic cancer often Google both back pain and yellowing skin before being diagnosed?) It was super interesting, but he didnt get into what we could do with these learnings. Id love to read a thoughtful book about how this information could make life better.

Which genres do you especially enjoy reading? And which do you avoid?

I think books are one of the best ways to learn about the world, so I love reading things that teach me something new. My reading list always includes a bunch of history and science books. Over a decade ago, I started reviewing books on my blog, but its only a small look at what I read every year, and it doesnt include things like the academic textbooks or research reports that I find really useful. I gravitate more toward nonfiction, although I wouldnt say I avoid fiction. I only read a couple novels each year. I usually end up loving them, though, so maybe I should try to read more.

What kind of reader were you as a child? Which childhood books and authors stick with you most?

Ive always liked getting recommendations from other people, even when I was a little kid. I used to ask my teachers what their favorite books were and make my way through the lists they gave me. Our school librarian used to suggest things for me to read, too. Shed often give me books that were supposed to be for kids older than I was, which was very exciting for me. The book I probably read the most growing up was The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress, a great science fiction book by Robert Heinlein.

How have your reading tastes changed over time?

I used to read a lot of science fiction when I was a kid, but not so much as an adult (although I rediscovered my love for the genre through Neal Stephensons incredible Seveneves a few years ago). These days, I reach for books about a much broader range of topics than I used to. I read Andy Puddicombes The Headspace Guide to Meditation and Mindfulness a couple years ago I dont think my 20-year-old self wouldve ever picked that one. As my kids have grown older, theyve introduced me to a lot of great books and authors that I wouldnt necessarily have come across by myself, like John Green. Thats been a lot of fun. And Melinda is always helping me expand my horizons she suggested I read Edith Eva Egers book The Choice last year, and I loved it.

What book would you recommend for Americas current political moment?

These Truths, by Jill Lepore. If youre going to solve a problem, you need to understand the context behind how it came to be. Lepore has written the most honest accounting of our countrys history that Ive ever read. The book is long, but it makes it clear how a lot of what we learned in school is simplified and ignores the less savory parts of American history.

What do you plan to read next?

I cant wait to read Walter Isaacsons new book, The Code Breaker, when it comes out in a couple weeks. Its about Jennifer Doudna, who won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry last year for her work on the CRISPR gene-editing platform.

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Bill Gates Has Always Sought Out New Reading Recommendations - The New York Times

This is why you have to watch out for the self-propelled pedestrian – Innovation Origins

The self-driving car is on its way and will be for some time to come. It works just fine on the highway or on main roads. As long as there are no cyclists busy sending apps, pizza delivery riders zipping by on their scooters or any inattentive pedestrians nearby, a self-driving car without a steering wheel can function well enough. If there are any out on the roads, they will only be able to drive at very low speeds in order to have enough brake in time for unexpected incidents. Also, a self-driving car will have a tough time crossing busy roads if there are pedestrians constantly crossing over. In short, traffic congestion will likely increase.

In order to explore what technological solutions can help with this, I came up with the term, the self-propelled pedestrian, a pleonasm somewhat similar to the self-driving car.

Back on March 7, 2015, I wrote the blog below, which, except for the future interconnectivity of cars, still has relevance today.

With some simple, existing technologies, the car will be able to drive itself, at least on the highway. If a car is equipped with lane-keeping assist, adaptive cruise control and automatic brake assist systems, the driver can calmly read a newspaper or take a nap on the highway. These types of self-driving cars are usually featured in the news, with the year 2017 or 2020 tacked on.

It is much more difficult to make a self-driving car for in city traffic, because cyclists, pedestrians and mobility scooters are very unpredictable and the robot car has absolutely no control over a pedestrians behavior. Besides, it is impossible for computer, radar, lidar, etc. systems to predict which intentions another road user may have. If a motorist is approaching on the left or right, it is the look in their eyes that is often the best predictor of their behavior. If their gaze is tense, then the road user intends to cross. If they are not staring so intensely or even seem a bit distracted, then they are willing to wait another round. Or they are under the influence of mind-altering substances. Systems that are installed on an automated car do not yet have this predictive capability. Albeit there are developments in this area as well.

Systems that can gauge car driver fatigue through eye movements have been around for quite a while. In such cases, the driver could be advised to go and grab a cup of coffee. Of course, the technology is already advanced enough that other drivers in the vicinity can be notified that a driver who is not well-rested is approaching from the left. Yet the right to privacy still takes precedence. A step further can measure breathing, muscle tension, heart rate, perspiration and skin temperature. These readings change under the influence of stress, and stress levels tend to increase when crossing complicated intersections.

Yet another step forward are predictions about human behavior that can be made by using a special MRI technique inside the brain. Neurologists at the University of Western Ontario (Canada) have been examining activity in several areas of the brain this way. By combining and interpreting that information, they can predict seconds in advance what movements a test subject will make next. Scientists at the University of Michigan have adapted this technology to make it mobile by inserting an implant into the skull that transmits signals to a small computer outside the body. This could also enable people with e.g. spinal cord injuries to still move their arms or legs. Technically speaking, this information could also be exchanged between cars and people so that trips around town would be slightly more comfortable.

Also read: A real-time signal from bicycles can reduce the number of serious accidents with cars

About this column

In a weekly column, written alternately byWendy van Ierschot,Bert Overlack,Eveline van Zeeland,Eugene Franken, Jan Wouters,Helen Kardan, Katleen Gabriels, Mary Fiersand Hans Helsloot, Innovation Origins tries to figure out what the future will look like. These columnists, occasionally joined by guest bloggers, are all working in their own way on solutions to the problems of our time. So that tomorrow is good. Here are all theprevious articles.

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This is why you have to watch out for the self-propelled pedestrian - Innovation Origins

How Congress might upend Section 230, the law big tech is built on – Livemint

More than 20 proposals to update Section 230 have surfaced on the Hill, originating from both sides of the aisle. Sens. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) and John Thune (R-S.D.), plan to reintroduce one of them, the PACT Act, in the coming weeks, says Sen. Thune. A competing bill was recently proposed by a trio of Democratic U.S. senators on Feb. 5. Its intention, as its backers wrote, is to make social-media companies accountable for enabling cyberstalking, targeted harassment and discrimination."

There is broad agreement among experts and politicians that Section 230 wont be eliminated, but thats where accord ends. While many believe an update of the law is necessary and imminent, many others think most attempts to alter it are dangerous. And despite a flurry of ideas for modernizing the law, its not clear where it falls in Congresss priorities in light of all the other challenges facing the country.

The heads of some Big Tech companies, notably Facebooks Mark Zuckerberg (in October) and Microsofts Satya Nadella (on Wednesday) have said they welcome more clarity on what sort of speech should be allowed under Section 230. Meanwhile, Twitter Chief Executive Jack Dorsey on Tuesday proposed a more market-driven" approach to addressing the desire to update Section 230. Even if legislation is passed, its not clear exactly what sort of cases will be brought to test the updated law, or what precedents those decisions will establish. And hashing it out in the courts could take years.

Section 230 touches on everything from election integrity to online social-media bias," says Klon Kitchen, who was until recently director of the Center for Technology Policy at the politically conservative Heritage Foundation. If we try to solve all the problems of the internet by making changes to this one law, he adds, well be overwhelmed by their unintended consequences.

Passed in 1996, Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act was explicitly intended to protect and promote Americas then-nascent internet industry. It is the foundational covenant between the state and internet platforms. It goes, roughly, like this: As long as sites arent knowingly helping their users commit crimes, what users share on these sites is the users own responsibility. Section 230 makes the business models of giants including Facebook and Google possible. Its the reason upstarts and competitors to these giants, from TikTok and MeWe to Parler and Gab, can exist. And it enables countless other businesses, too, such as Airbnb.

Much has changed since 1996. Then, there were 36 million people on the internet, most of them in the U.S. Now there are 4.8 billion, including 90% of Americans. And according to a survey by Pew published in July, 72% of U.S. adults say social-media companies have too much power and influence in politics.

Given the tech industrys power to determine what information we consumeand the apparent protection from scrutiny or recourse that Section 230 providesits no wonder a long and bipartisan list of politicians, appointed officials and career bureaucrats are concerned about the law.

Many Democrats are worried that platforms have used the protections of Section 230 as an excuse to let some kinds of speech run rampant; many Republicans believe theyve used it to police speech too much. Some want to add clarifying language to Section 230, while others want carve-outs," which make it explicit that companies only receive liability protections if they play by certain rules. A few, including Sens. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) and Ted Cruz (R-Texas), want Section 230gutted.

One of the reasons that hasnt happened is when legislators look at the implications of that, that juice isnt worth the squeeze," says Mr. Kitchen. The potential negative ramifications of wiping out Section 230 without having an adequate replacement would be considerable, and could seriously damage the U.S. economy, he adds.

Reverting to their pre-1996 legal status would mean websites and apps that act to moderate content in any way would be responsible for everything they host and disseminate. Services like Facebook and YouTube would either have to stop moderating and open the floodgates to spam, hate speech and other harmful content, or moderate and be potentially crushed by individual and class-action lawsuits for harms arising from what their users post. Most likely, theyd have to drastically narrow the scope and volume of whats permitted on their platforms.

For users on Twitter or Instagram, this could mean hitting share" and then hoping your post makes it past an army of automated filters and human reviewers that would put existing hurdles to shame. Meanwhile, someone would have to vet and vouch for every Google search result and Airbnb listing ahead of time. If this poses a crushing burden for Americas trillion-dollar tech behemoths, it would be infinitely worse for startups entering the industry.

Given that, most proposals focus on upgrading and expanding Section 230, not blowing it out an airlock.

Sens. Mark R. Warner (D-Va.), Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) and Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) proposed the SAFE TECH Act earlier this month. It does not appear to be the sort of bill that any Republicans will be eager to cosign. A grab bag of a half dozen proposals, it makes platforms liable for both ads they run and harassment they enable, and would allow (for example) Rohingya survivors to sue Facebook in U.S. court for what the United Nations has alleged is the companys role in the Myanmar genocide.

The act also incorporates changes to Section 230 proposed by legal scholars such as George Washington University law professor and former Obama administration Justice Department official Spencer Overton. He recommended a carve-out that would force online platforms to obey federal civil-rights laws. This would mean, among other things, platforms could not allow content or advertising intended to suppress voting by protected groups.

In addition, the bill would change what Section 230 protects from information" to speech," something proposed by law professors Danielle Keats Citron, of The University of Virginia, and Mary Anne Franks, of the University of Miami. This change would put all sorts of conduct outside the laws protection, from gun sales to fraudulent transactions, and force platforms to do something about them.

Courts are already establishing the limits of the existing language of Section 230 by, for example, ruling that it does not protect Airbnb from violations of local rental laws, which the company had argued it should.

With the SAFE TECH Act, were looking to shift the conversation around Section 230 away from Republicans debunked claims of anti-conservative bias to the real harms caused by internet platformsthings like civil rights violations, stalking, and harassment," says Sen. Hirono. This bill lays down a marker and signals to Facebook, Google, Twitter, and others that the days of burying your heads in the sand while your platforms are weaponized against innocent users are over," she adds.

Some scholars warn that the SAFE TECH Act could be nearly as threatening to the internet economy as eliminating Section 230 entirely. It is sloppily drafted to an irresponsible degree," says Daphne Keller, director of the Program on Platform Regulation at Stanford University, who was an associate general counsel at Google until 2015.

One provision enables claims against sites that receive or make payments for content. Ms. Keller says this could bring more lawsuits against entities such as Amazon Web Services, which could be liable for content shared by its customers users, and Bandcamp, which allows independent musicians to sell their tracks.

She says the law also loosely defines violations of peoples civil rights," and because it makes platforms liable for harassment or intimidation," it will be up to the courts to decide what constitutes harassment and intimidation of one user by another. The provisions intended to help victims of discrimination and harassment will be weaponized by trolls and white-supremecist organizations," she adds.

This legislation has some admirable goals," said Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), one of the original authors and sponsors of Section 230. Unfortunately, as written, it would devastate every part of the open internet, and cause massive collateral damage to online speech." The SAFE TECH Act would also cause web hosts and cloud storage companies to purge their networks of controversial speech, and harm and silence marginalized people whose speech might be considered controversial, he adds.

A Pew survey published last August says that 90% of Republicans believe social-media sites censor political viewpoints. Some researchers have found the opposite is true. A just-published report from researchers at New York University found that in general, social media privileges and amplifies the views of right-wing users.

The PACT Act, originally proposed in June 2020, would require online platforms to explain their content-moderation practices clearly, require quarterly reports on what content has been removed, and impose less stringent requirements on small online platforms, to avoid placing undue burdens on startups without the same resources as Big Tech.

Other legislative efforts like the SAFE TECH Act have taken a more targeted approach to address very specific issues," says Sen. Thune. The PACT Act brings more transparency to technology companies content moderation practices so we can hold them more accountableand there is bipartisan support for the outcomes the PACT Act seeks to achieve," he adds.

The question of how to fix the internet with updates to Section 230 is far-reaching and complex enough it could require leadership from the executive branch, says Nicol Turner Lee, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. President Biden could convene a commission on a handful of topics related to speech online, including the regulation of hate speech, harassment and incitement, she continues, and make updating Section 230 part of its agenda.

Such a committee could form soon. In a Jan. 26 hearing, President Bidens nominee for secretary of Commerce, Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo, said she would use the National Telecommunications and Information Administrations power to convene stakeholders to decide what is to be done about Section 230.

Whatever happens to Section 230, any changes to it cant possibly solve all of the problems of the modern internet which it has enabled.

Weve basically moved aspects of every kind of good and bad human behavior online, with consequences that are sometimes awful and very often complicated," says Ms. Keller. Now pundits and some people in D.C. have become convinced that we can tackle all of that by amending this one little law."

This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text.

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How Congress might upend Section 230, the law big tech is built on - Livemint

Relax, feeding the birds is fun – Valley Breeze

2/10/2021

One more Thing

By LAURENCE J. SASSO, JR.

Dont worry! Be happy!

You probably associate those reassuring words with a song by Bobby McFerrin. It was very popular in 1988. However, the phrase could also be the advice Kim Calcagno gives when it comes to feeding birds in your backyard.

Calcagno, who celebrated 16 years working for the Rhode Island Audubon Society last week, is the refuge manager for two of the organizations sites, including the headquarters in Smithfield.

She reassures bird lovers that it is OK to just enjoy their hobby. It isnt necessary to grow anxious about the dietary impact or lack thereof on the feathered consumers they attract.

For example, she points out that the notion you must continue putting out bird food for the entire winter once you begin supplying it to the winged visitors is something of a myth.

Birds dont depend on it. They have been feeding themselves for eons. They retain their instinct. They will find food. You can feed them regularly, but you dont have to. Birds will find things to eat. Running a bird restaurant with a never-ending source of food is not necessary. No matter what you do, birds only get about one quarter of their diet from feeders, so its OK to relax.

A sigh of relief is perfectly all right here, readers. Calcagno, 49, knows what she is talking about.

Her interest in birds and wildlife management began early in life. What spurred me on as a kid was volunteering at the Massachusetts Audubon Societys Blue Hills nature center. In fact, it led to her choice of career.

At Tufts University, she earned her bachelors degree in biology and environmental science and followed that with a masters in environmental studies and environmental education at Antioch University. Prior to her post at Rhode Island Audubon, she worked six years for the Massachusetts Audubon Society.

Asked exactly what her duties entail here in Rhode Island, she replies, a lot of different things, and she runs through a list that includes field work, wildlife management, teaching, lecturing, facility maintenance, speaking before community groups, keeping the trails open, etc.

In addition, she oversees the educational raptors that the society uses to teach the public about their behaviors. Currently, she reports, her latest charge is a peregrine falcon.

Returning to her observations about what homeowners and hobbyists new to bird feeding might expect to encounter, she says, a question we get fairly often is where did all the birds go.

She explains that people will call in bewilderment and ask if maybe they did something wrong or if there is a sickness depleting the flocks.

Usually, its just that the birds find some other source of food. They are always looking for new supplies, she notes, adding natural berries are attractive where options exist. Seeds that humans provide might be their second choice. So they go with the berries for a while.

She points out that sometimes there could be a temporary displacement caused by a predator such as a neighborhood cat or a Coopers hawk that is stalking the feeding area. Ultimately, though, the disappearance of the bird visitors is almost never a result of anything the host is doing.

However, Calcagno hastens to add that there are serious concerns about the larger environmental context that cannot be ignored.

Some statistics are pretty terrifying, she declares. In the last 60 to 70 years, she explains that the songbird population has dropped alarmingly.

According to Scientific American, there are some 3 billion fewer songbirds across North America than there were in 1970, a decrease of 29 percent.

Calcagno explains that the decimation is attributable to a number of factors, many of them due to human behavior such as the use of pesticides, the loss of habitat caused by agricultural and land development practices, and climate change.

The Audubon Society has been in the forefront of efforts to protect migratory birds. She notes that the organization helped to pass legislation establishing laws that regulate the treatment of affected species, although some of the restrictions were rolled back by the last administration.

Calcagno mentions that the work the Audubon Society does is supported by its members and donors. The three major functions of the organization are conservation, education, and advocacy.

One of the myths is that the society is a government agency. It is not, she says, adding we do need support.

Sometimes it comes in the form of material donations as well as monetary contributions and fees.

We have someone that I call the Tool Fairy. If a power drill is needed, it just shows up. There is this person who somehow finds out, and lo and behold there it is.

The cost of a family membership is $50. It helps fund activities and programs. Members get first dibs on offerings and discounts. Volunteers are also welcome.

During this time of COVID-19 access to the building is controlled, but there are outdoor activities, in which, says Calcagno, there is continuing participation.

The Wednesday morning bird walks are as popular as ever, and the Owl Prowls and hikes attract smaller numbers, but they are holding up.

After 16 years, her appetite for the job seems undiminished. She swells with enthusiasm in describing what motivates her.

When I teach folks and I see a transformative moment its stop and smell the roses for me. I say to myself this is why I do what I do. I have to have a job where I feel Im doing something important.

(Contact me at smithpublarry@gmail.com)

Bottom Lines

What Rhode Island institution of higher education kept its mascot at a Smithfield farm once owned by the family which donated the nearby land for the Audubon Societys headquarters and Powder Mill Ledges Wildlife Refuge in Smithfield? What was the animal? The first reader to respond gets a shout out here.

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Relax, feeding the birds is fun - Valley Breeze