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NY Attorney General sues crypto firms Gemini, Genesis
NY Attorney General sues crypto firms Gemini, Genesis
New York Attorney General Letitia James on Thursday sued cryptocurrency firms Gemini, Genesis Global and Digital Currency Group
2023-10-19 19:19
Meta, TikTok given a week by EU to detail measures against disinformation
Meta, TikTok given a week by EU to detail measures against disinformation
By Charlotte Van Campenhout and Bart H. Meijer BRUSSELS (Reuters) -Meta and TikTok have been given a week by the
2023-10-19 18:59
EU Proposes Delaying Some ESG Reporting Rules 
EU Proposes Delaying Some ESG Reporting Rules 
Europe’s executive arm is proposing a two-year delay in implementing a key element of its sustainable finance framework,
2023-10-19 17:24
Pets pose a serious health threat that we've all been overlooking
Pets pose a serious health threat that we've all been overlooking
While millions of people own cats and dogs and wouldn’t dream of getting rid of them, pets pose a health risk to humans that is massively overlooked, according to a new study. Since the Covid-19 pandemic swept the world with devastating impact, it has become evident how much of a risk new viruses can pose to our well-being. However, experts are warning that it is not just the wildlife trade or exotic animals that we should be concerned about, as pets could also be sources of zoonotic diseases (which jump from animals to humans). Back garden pets, house pets, working animals and even rodents and pests could host new viruses that could affect humans, according to a new study. It warns that the urbanisation of our habitats and climate change will have an impact on diseases and their dynamics. The study was shared in Science Translational Medicine and penned by disease ecologist Amandine Gamble along with a group of colleagues, who gave examples of how companion animals (aka pets) and stray animals carried a risk of zoonotic spillover. While the risk is thought to be small, experts warn it is significantly underappreciated, especially given the frequent proximity human beings have to pets and strays. The study said: “These animals can play critical roles in zoonotic spillover by enabling the maintenance of a zoonotic pathogen, facilitating its spatial spread, acting as a bridge between otherwise unconnected species, or providing particular opportunities for its evolution.” While the zoonotic spillover that caused Covid-19 sparked a global pandemic, any instance of infection that jumps from animal to human is known as a zoonotic, regardless of the numbers affected. Pet parrots are a known transmitter of the Chlamydia psittaci bacterium to humans. Elsewhere, bats and horses are also known sources of zoonotic diseases. In terms of common household pets, cats can act as a link to a number of fatal diseases. The experts explained: “Numbers of infections are low, but plague is endemic in 17 western U.S. states, and many of the small mammals on which cats prey carry Y. pestis. “Consequently, outdoor cats and cats with incomplete veterinary care, combined with human interaction, suggest that cat-transmitted plague can be considered an increasing public health risk.” They conclude that “it is critical to implement surveillance programs allowing us to track changes in pathogen dynamics”. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-10-19 17:21
Google bets on India with Pixel smartphone manufacturing
Google bets on India with Pixel smartphone manufacturing
By Tanvi Mehta and Blassy Boben NEW DELHI (Reuters) -Alphabet Inc's Google will start manufacturing smartphones in India and its
2023-10-19 17:20
Science recreate mysterious ice found on Neptune that only melts at extreme temperatures
Science recreate mysterious ice found on Neptune that only melts at extreme temperatures
Five years ago, scientists managed to recreate what is known as superionic ice, in lab experiments for the first time. Superionic ice is believed to form within Uranus and Neptune as familiar materials are subjected to extreme pressures and heat, with iron atoms forming hot, black, heavy ice. But just last year researchers at several universities in the United States discovered a new phase of superionic ice. The discovery helps broaden our understanding of why Uranus and Neptune have off-kilter magnetic fields with multiple poles. Different to forms of water on Earth, the oxygen atoms in superionic ice are locked in a solid cubic lattice, while the ionised hydrogen atoms are loose, flowing through the lattice. This gives superionic ice conductive properties as well as raising its melting point, meaning the frozen water remains solid at temperatures up to 4704 Degree Celsius (8500 Fahrenheit). In this latest study, Stanford University's Arianna Gleason and colleagues blasted thin slivers of water, sandwiched between two diamond layers, with some extremely powerful lasers. "Recent discoveries of water-rich Neptune-like exoplanets require a more detailed understanding of the phase diagram of [water] at pressure–temperature conditions relevant to their planetary interiors," Gleason and colleagues explain in their paper, from January 2022 X-Ray diffraction revealed the hot, dense ice's crystal structure, and confirmed the ice crystals were in fact a new phase, distinct from the superionic ice that was observed in 2019. This newly discovered superionic ice, Ice XIX, has increased conductivity compared to its 2019 predecessor. The conductivity is important because it helps us understand why certain off-kilter magnetic fields are generated on planets such as Neptune and Uranus. You can read the paper, published in Scientific Reports here. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-10-19 16:53
Climate Science in Arctic ‘Broken’ as US and Europe Isolate Russia
Climate Science in Arctic ‘Broken’ as US and Europe Isolate Russia
Irina Panyushkina is a dendrochronologist — a scientist who studies tree-ring dating to understand past environmental conditions —
2023-10-19 16:50
Netherlands, Denmark to Help Pay for South Africa’s Energy Transition 
Netherlands, Denmark to Help Pay for South Africa’s Energy Transition 
South Africa’s cabinet said that the Netherlands and Denmark have joined the Just Energy Transition Partnership, a landmark
2023-10-19 16:15
A Startup Battles Big Oil for the $1 Trillion Future of Carbon Cleanup
A Startup Battles Big Oil for the $1 Trillion Future of Carbon Cleanup
Most everyone who’s committed their career to solving the climate crisis comes to the field because they have
2023-10-19 15:57
TSMC Q3 profit falls 24.9%, beats expectations
TSMC Q3 profit falls 24.9%, beats expectations
TAIPEI (Reuters) -Taiwanese chipmaker TSMC posted a smaller-than-expected 25% fall in third-quarter net profit on Thursday, raising hopes that a
2023-10-19 14:57
Nokia says will cut up to 14,000 jobs
Nokia says will cut up to 14,000 jobs
Nokia will slash up to 14,000 jobs in a major cost-cutting drive, it said in a statement on Thursday.
2023-10-19 14:19
Xi Says Green Projects Will Anchor China’s Overseas Spending
Xi Says Green Projects Will Anchor China’s Overseas Spending
Delegates from developing nations are leaving meetings in China this week with grand promises of aid for green
2023-10-19 13:48
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