Monthly archives: December, 2020

The 5 Biggest Lessons We’ve Learned About How Coronavirus Spreads on Campus

Chronicle of Higher Education – “When colleges shifted operations online in the spring because of Covid-19, so much remained in question. How did the new coronavirus spread? What were its ill effects? Could colleges open for in-person instruction in the 2020-21 academic year, and what would happen if they did? As the fall term comes …

Subjects: Education, Health Care, Knowledge Management

What if you’ve already had Covid-19 — do you still need a vaccine?

The New York Times – Experts tackle questions about vaccine immunity. “…Which produces a stronger immune response: a natural infection or a vaccine? The short answer: We don’t know. But Covid-19 vaccines have predictably prevented illness, and they are a far safer bet, experts said. Vaccines for some pathogens, like pneumococcal bacteria, induce better immunity …

Subjects: Health Care

As libraries fight for access to e-books, a new copyright champion emerges

Fortune – “A long running battle over copyright has flared up again, and Lila Bailey is at the center of it. A personable 43-year-old with degrees in philosophy and law, Bailey is the chief lawyer for the Internet Archive, a non-profit facing a major lawsuit from big publishers over how it lends out e-books. “This …

Subjects: Copyright, Digital Rights, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Libraries

Can employers require employees to get a vaccine?

Jena McGregor, Employers start preparing for the coronavirus vaccine with a question: Can we require it?, Wash. Post (Dec. 2, 2020) Locally, Steve Calandrillo was interviewed by a King 5 reporter: Tony Black, Could employers in Washington [state] require employees to get a coronavirus vaccine?, KING-TV (Dec. 3, 2020) Abigail Hess – Can your employer require …

Subjects: Health Care, Legal Research

Find Your Place in the Vaccine Line

The New York Times – “A vaccine may be around the corner, but how long will it be until you get the shot? Health officials are considering vaccine timelines that give some Americans priority over others. If you’re a healthy American, you may wait many months for your turn. To put this in perspective, we …

Subjects: Health Care, Medicine

ABA Legal Fact Check explores legal ramifications of lawyers filing frivolous lawsuits

“With the campaign and allies of President Donald J. Trump filing several dozen unsuccessful lawsuits related to the Nov. 3 election, a new ABA Legal Fact Check released today examines whether lawyers working on the president’s behalf could face sanctions for filing frivolous claims or professional misconduct. Lawyers are officers of the court and must …

Subjects: Courts, Health Care, Legal Research

Amazon Publishing in Talks to Offer E-books to Public Libraries

Publishers Weekly – The potential deal would be a breakthrough moment in the library e-book market as Amazon currently does not make its digital content available to libraries. It would also be a major coup for the Digital Public Library of America’s upstart e-book platform and its SimplyE library reading app…Such an agreement would be …

Subjects: Copyright, Digital Rights, E-Commerce, Education, Internet, Knowledge Management, Libraries

Face Recognition Software Shows Improvement in Recognizing Masked Faces

Technology.org: “The findings, produced by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), are detailed in a new report called Ongoing Face Recognition Vendor Test (FRVT) Part 6B: Face Recognition Accuracy with Face Masks Using Post-COVID-19 Algorithms (NISTIR 8331). It is the agency’s first study that measures the performance of face recognition algorithms developed following …

Subjects: AI, Civil Liberties, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Privacy

Infodemic: The other face of epidemics (COVID-19)

Open Access Government – “Dr Sylvie Briand, Director, Global Infectious Hazards Preparedness Department at the World Health Organization, explains how COVID-19 is accompanied by an infodemic  – Since the beginning of the outbreak a year ago, the COVID-19 pandemic has caused more than 1.5 million deaths and more than 63 million confirmed cases have been …

Subjects: Government Documents, Health Care, Internet, Knowledge Management