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Quantum Earth TV - QETV The online Television on Quantum Science, Science-Fiction and Spirituality
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Quantum Earth Television, your independent online TV, brings compelling, independent and informative documentaries; talk-shows like Quantum Earth on the future of Science, Spirituality & Metaphysics; and, juicy and tasty Jazz, R&B, Nu-Soul and many more musics to chill and to thrill.

Le Pote'Cast - Épisode  #11: Guest: Gaelle BuswelPote'cast - Season 1 -- The Pote'cast is a show around the music, beetl...
23/07/2021

Le Pote'Cast - Épisode #11: Guest: Gaelle Buswel
Pote'cast - Season 1 -- The Pote'cast is a show around the music, beetles, with a good big dose of second degree. Every Thursday, we leave "to discover" and receive a guest from the world of music to evoke his career, his news, quite relaxed.
https://www.spreadtheword.fr/le-potecast
https://www.youtube.com/c/LePoteCast
Last episode of the first season:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=idPNLsBBt4s

Abonnez-vous les amis ! https://bit.ly/3oTG3w4Vous souhaitez nous soutenir et nous aider à continuer à produire ?Voir notre boutique : https://www.spreadthe...

The SOYUZ-2.1a/Fregat of the GK Launch Services will be live-streamed! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J1nfIV-4_e8Saturd...
16/03/2021

The SOYUZ-2.1a/Fregat of the GK Launch Services will be live-streamed! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J1nfIV-4_e8
Saturday 20 March 2021 at 09:07 AM Moscow Time
The International Astronautical Federation (IAF) and its member GK Launch Services are proud to announce that the launch of the winner of the exclusive competition for a Free Launch of 1U CubeSat on the First Commercial Mission of GK Launch Services organized by the IAF will be streamed live!

The winner of the competition, IAF Member Sapienza University of Rome, whose students, together with the universities of Tel Aviv (Israel) and Nairobi (Nigeria), presented the SIMBA project (System for Improving Monitoring of the Behavior of Wild Animals) will be using the launcher Soyuz-2.1a/Fregat. The second winner GRBAlpha Spacecraft, IAF Member University of Košice, has been developed to demonstrate the detector technology and electronics for the future “Cubesats Applied for MEasuring and LOcalising Transients” – CAMELOT mission, which is a planned constellation of nanosatellites providing all-sky coverage with high sensitivity and localization accuracy following detections of gamma-ray transients.

The new generation of Soyuz launchers features high reliability, multi-functionality, and eco-friendliness – a rocket of great world renown – launched from Baikonur and known for its long successful flight heritage and orbit injection accuracy.
The Launch will be live-streamed this Saturday 20 March 2021 starting from 08:15 AM Moscow Time on: https://youtu.be/J1nfIV-4_e8

The official hashtag of the event on social media is
GK LAUNCH SERVICES COMPETITION
GK Launch Services

GK Launch Services is an operator of commercial launches. The company was established by the decision of Roscosmos and is authorized to conclude and implement commercial contracts for the launch of spacecraft using Soyuz-2 family launch vehicles from the Russian spaceports.

Click here for more info »
For company updates please visit:


WildTrackCube-SIMBA Spacecraft is designed for:

Demonstrating a spaceborne method for improving the monitoring of the wildlife behavior in the Kenyan National Parks. The satellite is equipping innovative spread-spectrum modulation receiving equipment in order to receive data from radio tags installed on wildlife of various sizes (ideally from birds to large mammals) in the National Parks of Kenya. The system is addressed at acquiring both positioning (Global Positioning System, GPS) and health from the animals.

Live broadcast of the Soyuz-2.1a rocket/Fregat upper stage launch.Orbiting the CAS500-1 spacecraft and 37 SmallSats and CubeSats from 18 countries. The launc...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MyXJyILRYqk
30/10/2020

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MyXJyILRYqk

Immigrant advocates are alarmed at what they see as the beginning of a larger possible outbreak at a facility they believe has not taken enough precautions t...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rCIQ78LJE9Q
30/10/2020

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rCIQ78LJE9Q

The U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet, has condemned the conditions of detention in which refugees and migrants are being held on th...

30/10/2020

Inter-American Commission on Human Rights
Press Release 262/20 IACHR Expresses Its Concern Over Reports of Sterilizations and Surgical Interventions Without Consent in Migrant Detention Centers in the USA. October 30, 2020 Washington, D.C. - The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) condemns the sterilization without adequate information and prior consent that have allegedly taken place at the migrant detention center in Irwin County, Georgia.
These nonconsensual surgical procedures would represent a violation of the rights to personal security, to be free from arbitrary or unlawful interference with privacy, family, and to the preservation of the health of migrant women.
It represents a complex manifestation of violence based on intersecting factors that include gender, migrant status, race, and national origin.
In the light of Inter-American standards, these practices could also constitute a serious violation of the reproductive and sexual rights of the women concerned.
In response, the IACHR urges the state to immediately eradicate such practices and to investigate, prosecute, and sanction those responsible for them.
Likewise, the United States should provide the victims with an effective remedy for those whose human rights have been violated.

According to the complaint presented by human rights organizations to the Office of the Inspector General of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), dated September 14, 2020, there were several violations against migrant persons, mainly against women, detained at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility in Irwin, which is operated by a private company that also runs other detention centers.
This complaint was corroborated by a report from an independent medical team whose findings were published on October 22.
It reviewed the medical records of 19 migrant women who were previously detained and described multiple violations of human rights, including reproductive rights and the right to health in general.
In addition to the surgical procedures mentioned above, the following issues were highlighted
(i) overall negligent general medical care;
(ii) a lack of effective measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19;
(iii) obstacles to accessing medical services due to language barriers and a lack of interpreters; and
(iv) discriminatory treatment and intimidation of migrants from Spanish-speaking countries, especially by medical staff at the center.
The IACHR observes that the complaint includes testimonies from a former nurse and detainees at the Irwin ICE Detention Center, who allege the existence of unjustified invasive surgical procedures —including sterilization practices such as hysterectomies— on female migrants in detention. This situation has allegedly worsened since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic and has been exacerbated by the absence of adequate channels of communication, resulting in an atmosphere of tension and misinformation among the migrant population detained at the center.

In response to these allegations, the IACHR recalls the decision of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights in the ruling on Case of IV v. the State of Bolivia.
The Court noted that sexual and reproductive health constitutes an aspect of health that has specific implications for women due to their biological capacity to carry and give birth to children.
It is related on the one hand, to autonomy and reproductive freedom in terms of the rights of women to make autonomous decisions about their lives and bodies.
Sexual and reproductive health is also linked to access to services, information, and education, and to the means that allow them to exercise this right.
In this regard, the Inter-American Court determined that permanently terminating a woman’s reproductive capacity, causing infertility, and imposing a serious, lasting physical change on her without her consent causes serious mental and physical suffering.
In a similar vein, the United Nations Committee against Torture has pointed out that gender, in combination with other personal characteristics such as race, migratory status, or age, can determine the ways in which women and girls suffer or are at risk of torture and ill-treatment.

Likewise, the IACHR wishes to highlight the intersectional nature of the general framework in which these violations are reported—the combination of deprivation of liberty, gender discrimination, and other differentiated impacts.
In response to this and in consideration of the need to adopt a differentiated and intersectional approach, the IACHR reminds the state of its international obligation to protect the human rights of all persons subject to its jurisdiction and in particular, regarding the right personal security, in the context of women’s sexual and reproductive health.
Therefore, the IACHR urges the state to immediately eliminate these practices, to review the mechanisms for obtaining consent, and to provide information about medical procedures to migrants in detention.

With regard to the complaints of negligent healthcare at the Irwin migrant detention center, according to information available to the IACHR, these consist mainly of:
(i) inadequate medical care;
(ii) insufficient cleaning and disinfection services; and
(iii) a shortage of both general and medical personnel.
According to public information, this situation would expose both the migrants deprived of liberty and staff at the facility to risks of infection from COVID-19 and other diseases. In particular, in the context of the pandemic, other irregularities have been observed, such as a lack of protective equipment and protocols, the absence of biosafety practices, the lack of space for quarantining and social distancing, and insufficient testing to identify suspected cases of COVID-19.

On the other hand, in keeping with information recently received, the CIDH learnt of a pattern of abuse and serious violations of rights within immigration detention centers in the country.

In particular, among other violations, there are complaints related to:
i) sexual abuse and gender-based violence,
ii) deprivation of the right to freedom of religion or belief,
iii) deplorable conditions of detention, and iv) forced separation of girls, boys and adolescents migrants.

In this context, the IACHR calls on the United States to analyze these allegations seriously, implement an in-depth review of the practices and protocols for attending to migrants, and ensure that they have effective access to justice.

Furthermore, it urges the state to promote a comprehensive restructuring of the procedures and institutions that created these systematic violations.

These measures should contemplate accountability, including by private operators, to prevent these events from being repeated.
The IACHR underscores the need for the US migration response to be consistent with the principles of non-criminalization of migration and comprehensive protection of human rights.

The IACHR noted that the following publications include guidelines for adopting such measures: the recommendations and guidelines provided in the Inter-American Principles on the Human Rights of All Migrants, Refugees, Stateless Persons, and Victims of Human Trafficking, Resolution 01/20 on Pandemics and Human Rights, and the accompanying press releases on the issue, namely Press Release no. 77/2020 and Press Release no. 179/2020.

Finally, the IACHR is concerned by the fact that, according to information published by the press, no relevant measures were taken between September 14, the date when the complaint was formally submitted to the Office of the Inspector General of the DHS, and the most recent press reports, which were published on October 22.
The public reports and information received by the IACHR are a further source of concern, as they indicate a climate of fear of reprisals against migrants detained at the Irwin detention center. In this context, the IACHR stresses the importance of ensuring the free and full right of personal security of witnesses and all human rights defenders and those collaborating with the justice system.

A principal, autonomous body of the Organization of American States (OAS), the IACHR derives its mandate from the OAS Charter and the American Convention on Human Rights.

The Inter-American Commission has a mandate to promote respect for and defense of human rights in the region, and acts as a consultative body to the OAS in this area.

The Commission is composed of seven independent members who are elected in an individual capacity by the OAS General Assembly and who do not represent their countries of origin or residence.

This is a boxed text block. You can use it to draw attention to important content.

Contact info:
IACHR Press and Communication Office
[email protected]
CIDH / IACHR
Sede / Headquarters
1889 F Street NW
Washington, D.C. 20006

28/09/2020

Coronavirus Lockdown already wreaking hunger in Israel, again As stomachs rumble across the nation, our food distribution charity is again busier than ever, but it's hard to ask donors to give yet again SEP 27, 2020 I’m switching the Shana Tova greeting for another: Happy Groundhog Day. Sure, the new lockdown in Israel feels very different for many of us. Nobody is clamoring for toilet paper, the shelves are full of eggs, and citizens can venture a kilometer from home, instead of 100 meters. But standing where I am, on the front line of the fight to keep Israelis fed as their jobs and stability disappear, I can tell you it looks scarily similar.
As I write, the government is announcing that all non-essential businesses will be closed, meaning that many people will be newly unemployed, and grappling with the consequences on their pockets and their dinner tables.
Even before this tightening of restrictions, lockdown was hitting the nation hard. On Monday, the the first working day of the new year, thousands realized they are newly without a place of work to go. Israel’s Employment Service reported that some 110,000 people have registered for unemployment benefits since lockdown was announced, bringing the number of unemployed in Israel to 837,00.
In the offices and on the food trucks of Leket Israel, the national food bank, it feels like we’ve time travelled back to March, when the first lockdown began and we saw citizens who had never before experienced hunger request help to find their next meal.
It feels like a harsh reality that we thought was slowly improving has been thrown backwards several months.
The residents of Eilat, who were starting to revive their businesses by receiving tourists, are once again scrambling to pay their bills. In every Israeli town and city, even the most genteel, there are people who don’t know how they will buy next week’s groceries.
As they dipped their apple in honey over Rosh Hashanah, some wondered if it may be one of their last sweet treats for weeks.
For the part of my charity’s team, supplies of food that we’re normally given to redistribute to the needy, from the leftovers of buffets at hotels, offices and events have, once again, disappeared. In a rerun of the spring, if we want to keep people fed, we have to buy food that would normally come in as donations.
There were times during the first wave when we thought things were getting better and we were slapped back into crisis, but this is on a new scale.
Except, this time it’s harder for people like me to do what’s expected of us. We’re caught between a rock and a hard place.
As stomachs rumble across the nation, we don’t want to turn people away. On the other hand, as donors face their own worries, about their finances, about the impact of the pandemic on their health and family, we are reluctant to push them too much to give.
Heartwarmingly, many do still want to do everything they can. This is true of Israelis, who care deeply for their society, and Jewish people in the Diaspora, who in a normal year may be visiting Israel and contributing to its economy, but in the absence of a trip, want to make their contribution.
Yet just as parents feel fatigued by the prospect of children home again for weeks, as teachers feel fatigued by the challenge of online education, and as medical professionals feel fatigued by the endless demands on their time and energy, donors feel fatigue.
Lots of them reached deep into their pockets in March and April, and possibly over the summer too, but are now hearing again that the need is great.
How much should we ask? How passionately should we make requests? How do we manage both our obligation to hungry Israelis and the respect we must show to donors at this difficult time
It feels like we’re rewinding to March, but with these questions buzzing, it’s even harder. Back then, we had our reserves — our emotional reserves, to help us and others to weather the storm, and in lots of cases, financial reserves. Now every request is a bigger ask than it was six months ago.

The days of March and April felt repetitive, but we’re now experiencing repetition of the repetition. To borrow a phrase from the late American baseball catcher Yogi Berra, it’s déjà vu all over again. There is just one difference: it feels like we’re taking on the same challenge, but this time with our hands tied behind our backs.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Joseph Gitler is the founder and chairman of Leket Israel -- The National Food Bank, the leading food rescue non-profit organization that rescues fresh, perishable food, working with 195 non-profits throughout the country to distribute nutritious food to over 175,000 Israelis weekly.

23/09/2020
23/09/2020

Latvia President Egils Levits speech at the United Nations General Assembly general debate - I Introduction: Mr President, Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen, I congratulate you, Mr Bozkir, on assuming the post of President of the current session of the United Nations General Assembly. I assure you of Latvia’s co-operation as you guide the work of this essential body in the coming year. II Multilateral response to COVID-19 pandemic: Mr President, We meet in virtual form because of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has caused unprecedented global upheaval in our generation.
While each country has taken measures to prevent and control the spread of the pandemic at home, no country can overcome it on its own.
The United Nations and its agencies, notably the World Health Organization, are crucial in coordinating and providing a global response. This role should be fulfilled effectively, and lessons must be learned to be better prepared for future challenges.
Latvia quickly responded to the global appeal of the UN Secretary-General by contributing to the Global Humanitarian Response Plan for COVID-19 through the World Health Organization.
Furthermore, Latvian scientists participate in the global efforts to develop an effective vaccine against the virus, so that we can return to normality.
III Global security
Mr President,
Effective multilateralism remains the most essential tool for maintaining the international rules-based order and security.
The rules-based order is the foundation for global justice and peace. The main purpose of international law is to ensure respect for fundamental human rights and state sovereignty. The world will see fewer conflicts and threats to peace if people sense they are treated justly. Every state is responsible for respecting this order.
The United Nations, too, must make every effort to ensure that this order is respected, both by large and small states – nowadays not only in the analogue world, but also the virtual world created by modern technologies.
Therefore, the United Nations should actively use all instruments, including diplomatic efforts and peace-keeping missions, to find just political solutions to today’s complex and protracted conflicts throughout the world.
Concerning one important aspect of justice, Latvia remains strong in its support of the Women, Peace and Security agenda, in recognition of the close link between global security and equal participation of women.
The substantial contribution of smaller countries to international peace and security is currently being demonstrated by our northern neighbour Estonia, as it holds a non-permanent seat on the UN Security Council. Latvia, too, hopes to assume this honour and responsibility for the term 2026–2027.
IV Recovery from the pandemic
Mr President,
Latvia supports the UN Secretary-General’s call to “build back better” from the pandemic. As a member of the UN Economic and Social Affairs Council (ECOSOC) Latvia will continue to advance the “recover better” agenda.
The implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the Paris Agreement must remain at the centre of our recovery efforts. Faster recovery will require good governance and respect for human rights and gender equality.
I am convinced that to “recover better” means a green, digital and inclusive recovery. We urgently need to strengthen our efforts to address climate change, to tackle the loss of biodiversity and to protect the environment. We should promote more sustainable consumption and production patterns. Latvia has joined the Group of Friends to combat marine plastic pollution. We stand ready to work together to address this challenge and to share the Baltic Sea region perspective.
During the pandemic Latvia quickly introduced digital solutions and tools in order to continue education and all democratic processes remotely. Latvia was amongst the first countries to develop a national mobile application “StopCovid”, successfully balancing effectiveness of contact tracing with respect for privacy. Latvia was also among the first to introduce e-parliament, where a Parliament can fully function remotely – propose new legislation, debate and vote on laws – relying on the secure digital identity of every member of Parliament.
Mr President,
“Recover better” also means that in going digital, we must take even greater care with data collection and use, especially in regard to privacy. When governments, international companies and other entities digitally collect more information about a person than he or she is aware, this creates a considerable threat to personal freedom. It also makes a person much more vulnerable to manipulation.
To be more concrete and direct – digital tracing and profiling, which are very difficult to evade, endanger a person’s fundamental freedom. This is a serious challenge for society. By resolving the legal framework and investing in technologies that factor in respect for privacy, I believe we can create human-centred technologies with much bigger potential. We all need to address this challenge together, at the national, regional and global level, with full respect for fundamental human rights and freedoms.
I want Latvia to be a global role model for a human-centred multilingual digital economy, to support developing economies in going digital, and at the same time to elaborate digital standards for the respect of privacy and to promote them internationally.
V Infodemic
Mr President,
Latvia is concerned that among other negative consequences, COVID-19 has created a breeding ground for misinformation, disinformation, fake news and hate speech. It is critical that states counter misinformation and provide access to free, reliable and science-based information through free media. This is a universal human right that we must respect and help each other to exercise.
Latvia has credible expertise and can contribute to this end. In June at the United Nations, Latvia together with a cross-regional group of 130 countries called for action to fight misinformation and disinformation, or the so-called “infodemic”, in the context of COVID-19.
The statement complements the “Verified” campaign announced by the UN Secretary-General, as well as the UNESCO response to this negative trend.
Free, objective and pluralistic media plays an indispensable role in informing the public during the ongoing pandemic.
Technology companies and social media platforms need to be more accountable for addressing online disinformation. Social media is not merely a platform where people and diverse information meets. The technology, the algorithms, the business models that drive the advertising market and attention economy all play a large part in the distribution of disinformation. Our priority must be to protect both privacy and freedom of expression in the digital domain.
The exponential increase of misinformation, disinformation, fake news and hate speech in recent years is dangerous not only in the context of the pandemic. It is a general threat to world peace, it is a general threat to efforts to solve global issues such as climate change and environmental pollution. In short – it is a general problem of humankind to find rational solutions to the challenges of our time. These threats should be taken seriously both on the national and international level.
VI Distortion of history
Mr President,
Concerning the wider phenomenon of disinformation, I would like to address one example. Russia’s increasingly revisionist approach, especially in the context of World War II events, is unacceptable. Russia makes continuous attempts to turn history into a disinformation tool. This goes hand in hand with continuing restrictions on democracy and free speech. We call for an independent, international investigation into the recent poisoning of opposition leader Alexei Navalny. The perpetrators of this crime must be held accountable.
VII Belarus
We also follow with great concern the events in Belarus, especially in view of the brutal repressions that followed the presidential elections on August 9. We call for new, democratic and transparent elections and an end to the repression of peaceful demonstrators. Latvia is currently providing medical treatment to several victims of the repressions. We also call on Russia to desist from any further interference in Belarus, so that its people can decide for themselves the future of their state.
The women of Belarus especially have shown great strength and courage. Sviatlana Aleksiyevich, laureate of the 2015 Nobel Prize for literature, speaks of “thirst for changes, thirst for new life, thirst for honesty”. In Latvia we still remember such thirst 30 years ago. We are always ready to share our rich experience of regaining democracy and freedom.
VIII Conclusion
Mr President,
I sincerely hope that this time next year we can all meet again in person. Until then, let us use this unusual time wisely. Mobilized by the shared suffering during this pandemic, let us make renewed efforts to forge peace and a sustainable way of life, for the good of all humanity.
Thank you!

10/09/2020

US$3-million Breakthrough Prize winners
Discovering the “on-and-off switch” for good parenting in both male and female mouse brains has earned molecular biologist Catherine Dulac one of the most lucrative awards in science and mathematics. “My brain froze, then I began to tear up,” says Dulac of the moment she heard the news. Three more US$3-million Breakthrough prizes in biology were also announced today, plus two in physics and one in mathematics, together with a number of smaller prizes.

Nature | 5 min read
We’ve saved up to 48 species since 1993
Conservation efforts have saved up to 48 bird and mammal species from extinction since 1993, when the UN Convention on Biological Diversity came into force. The Iberian lynx, California condor and pygmy hog are among those that have been saved. Researchers estimate that extinction rates would have been three to four times greater without conservation action. Many of the species are still endangered. “This is a call to action,” says study co-leader Phil McGowan. “The loss of entire species can be stopped if there is sufficient will to do so.”

The Guardian | 5 min read
Reference: Conservation Letters paper
Star system shreds its planet-forming disk
Astronomers have observed, for the first time, a multi-star system ripping apart the disk of material that could form planets. The three stars of GW Orionis have pulled some of their surrounding gas and dust into a warped disk with tilted rings. The rings could someday form planets with wildly oblique and distant orbits. “We are looking at what could eventually become an unusual type of planetary system in the very process of forming,” says study co-author Alison Young.

Space.com | 7 min read
Reference: Science paper
The inner ring of GW Orionis: model and SPHERE observations
An artist’s impression (left) of the inner ring of GW Orionis and the actual image (right) taken with the SPHERE instrument on the Very Large Telescope array. (ESO/L. Calçada, Exeter/Kraus et al.)
1.2 terawatt-hours
The electricity used by CERN in years when the accelerators are running — about 2% of all the electricity consumed by Switzerland. (CERN Environment Report)

COVID-19 coronavirus update
A woman receives a vaccination.
There are more than 175 COVID-19 vaccines in development, but only a handful are in final-stage clinical trials. (Joe Raedle/Getty)
The underdog coronavirus vaccines
You might have heard about the front-running vaccines from organizations including Moderna, CanSino and the University of Oxford (although trials for the latter are on hold). But with more than 300 vaccines at some stage of development, some very promising candidates are struggling to get attention and funding. Many have notable advantages: tried-and-tested manufacturing techniques, for example, or an easy and promisingly effective dose through the nose. The world will need these alternatives should early favourites fail for safety, efficacy or practicality reasons. “Everyone is rooting for them to succeed beyond anyone’s expectation, but it’s prudent to think about what happens if they don’t,” says virologist Dave O’Connor. “We need to make sure we have back-up plans — and back-up plans to those back-up plans.”
Nature | 7 min read

Features & opinion
How the FDA should protect its integrity
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is facing criticism over whether politics is exerting an undue influence on its decisions about COVID-19 treatments. Joshua Sharfstein was acting commissioner of the agency in 2009, when it faced similar questions about undue influence. He argues that the lessons learnt then about trust and integrity are even more essential now. “Soon, amid a cacophony of misinformation and confusion, amplified by political polarization and social media, Americans will have to weigh the merits of vaccination,” says Sharfstein. “The integrity of the country’s leading public-health regulatory agency is more than an abstraction; it is a matter of life and death.”

Nature | 5 min read
Hello from the outside
Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 are unveiling for the first time what our Solar System looks like from the outside. The two NASA spacecraft, launched in 1977, are now both more than 16 billion kilometres from Earth. They were the first to cross the boundary of the heliosphere — the protective bubble formed by the solar wind. They have revealed that what appears to be vast nothingness is actually a roiling soup of clashing magnetic fields.

BBC Future | 10 min read
How to learn to love web scraping
Data available online can be messy. Building a web scraper automates tasks such as gathering information from separate PDFs or web pages into a more usable format, such as a spreadsheet. Building a web scraper can also teach you about software development, boost confidence and feel like a research superpower, say three researchers who build data-wrangling tools to support evidence-based medicine.

Nature | 6 min read
Image of the week
Animated clip of a Przewalski’s foal running in its enclosure.
Przewalski’s horse (Equus przewalskii) is one of the species that has benefited from conservation efforts. This Przewalski’s horse foal was cloned from s***m that had been frozen 40 years ago in a bid to expand the species’ genetic diversity. All living Przewalski’s horses are descended from just 12 individuals. (Time | 4 min read) (Revive & Restore/ViaGen Equine/San Diego Zoo Global)
Quote of the day
“There’s a body of knowledge you develop as a community that cannot be replicated by Western science.”
Anthropologist Julie Raymond-Yakoubian lauds an example of a successful collaboration that gave oceanographers access to the wide-ranging knowledge of Indigenous Alaskan people. (Science | 7 min read)

This newsletter is always evolving — tell us what you think! Please send your feedback to [email protected].

Flora Graham, senior editor, Nature Briefing

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