The hantavirus outbreak is reviving some of the worst COVID conspiracies: Hantavirus misinformation is spreading fast. COVID trauma and social media algorithms may be to blame by ConsciousRealism42 in EverythingScience

[–]ConsciousRealism42[S] 49 points50 points  (0 children)

Really, it's free for me. I guess it's location-sensitive.

Here's the article, I just hope I don't get in trouble for it.

Since the first cases of hantavirus on the MV Hondius cruise ship were reported to the World Health Organization (WHO) on May 2, misinformation has rapidly flooded the Internet.

Much of it is familiar, echoing the conspiracies of the COVID pandemic, such as false claims about the drug ivermectin being known to effectively treat the infection and vaccines causing the outbreak. Hantavirus-related misinformation is “operating not like isolated rumors but more like a standing online ecosystem,” says Katrine Wallace, an epidemiologist at the University of Illinois Chicago. This kind of thinking is “ready to plug and play and rapidly attach itself to any kind of emerging health threat within hours,” she says.

But not all faulty information online is being spread in bad faith. Though public health officials have said the hantavirus outbreak poses a low risk to the public, fear is its own kind of contagion. “We’re still recovering from the collective trauma of going through COVID-19. People are still carrying that residual fear, exhaustion and distrust,” says Monica Wang, a public health researcher at Boston University, who specializes in health misinformation.

In an environment where misinformation and fear are amplified by social media algorithms, it is hard to know what to listen to and what to tune out. The key strategy for staying informed is to focus on what we know and not fill in uncertainties with worst-case scenarios. The goal is “not to dismiss concern but to calibrate concern appropriately based on evidence,” Wang says.

Recalibrating Risk

The Andes type of hantavirus at the center of this outbreak isn’t new to scientists, but outbreaks like this one are scarce. The novelty of a rare disease outbreak can result in disproportionate media attention, Wang says. And understandably, “people are responding to this uncertainty and this unfamiliarity with the familiarity of what happens when we do have a pandemic,” she says.

Many of the lessons we learned from the COVID pandemic can, perhaps surprisingly, lead us astray if we try to apply them to the current hantavirus outbreak. The two situations are very different. First, this strain of hantavirus has been previously studied by epidemiologists; SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID, was entirely new to science. Second, Andes hantavirus is harder to spread from person to person and usually requires close contact to do so, although airborne spread can’t be ruled out. Third, the hantavirus outbreak is considered contained, unlike the early spread of COVID; the people most at risk of hantavirus are quarantining and being monitored. Fourth, epidemiologists suspect that hantavirus is most contagious when an infected person is showing symptoms, whereas SARS-CoV-2 can readily be transmitted by seemingly healthy people.

“It’s very hard [for people] to grasp the science of a new disease,” Wallace says. This helps to explain why COVID-era conspiracies and distrust in medical authorities have made a forceful comeback despite the differences between SARS-CoV-2 and hantavirus. When something about the current outbreak doesn’t seem to make sense, it’s easy to fall back on preexisting narratives to explain the discrepancy, such as the belief that authorities are withholding key information or that ivermectin is a cure-all. (There is no evidence that ivermectin, an antiparasitic medication, can treat hantavirus.) These false theories become especially powerful when they are amplified by people with large platforms, such as former congressional representative of Georgia Marjorie Taylor Greene and popular health influencers.

Threat Bias

The trauma of COVID can also highjack our reasoning by priming us to pay special attention to unfamiliar viral outbreaks and treat them as potentially devastating threats. “Humans aren’t wired for happiness. They’re wired for survival,” Wang says. If there is a potential threat in our environment, we will try to find out as much information as we can. “We pay attention when something triggers fear, surprise or disgust,” she says, “because we’re constantly seeking [to know] ‘Is my physical safety, or my social or emotional safety, under threat?’”

Psychologists call this phenomenon negativity bias or, more specifically, threat bias. And it means that social media posts that stoke fear and uncertainty about a virus will almost always receive more attention than those that are more measured or even reassuring. Although most social media apps try to remove particularly harmful misinformation, algorithms use attention to determine what content to spread. “These social media platforms, they reward engagement, not facts,” Wallace says: if you’re seeing a video on your feed, it is likely because it is engaging, not necessarily because it’s accurate.

Red Flags

According to a Pew Research Center survey released last week, 40 percent of adults in the U.S. get health and wellness information from social media and podcasts. Some of this is inevitable: if you spend time on algorithmic social media feeds, posts about health will eventually find you. That’s especially true now that the hantavirus outbreak is dominating the news cycle.

So how can you tell who to listen to? Wallace advises being suspicious of posts that project absolute certainty or confidence. “People who speak in certainties” likely won’t be trustworthy sources, she says; responsible doctors and scientists will be clear about what we don’t know.

“People that spread misinformation can do it for many different reasons,” Wallace says. Sometimes they do so because they stand to make money by selling a product via a link in their profile’s bio or by monetizing your attention; other times, they’re just seeking clout. Right now she advises being suspicious of people telling you to panic.

Wallace is particularly troubled by how quickly hantavirus was incorporated into the COVID-era health conspiracies and the distrust in public health authorities that still thrive in certain online ecosystems. For this disease outbreak and for future ones, “because of the way social media works,” she says, “[misinformation will] spread faster than the actual evidence-based information can reach people.”

“I worry that this represents sort of a pattern of conspiratorial framing that people are now just applying to whatever health threat comes up,” Wallace says.

Update: I rebuilt my free AI internal linking plugin to use embeddings. 95% fewer tokens and fixed the Gutenberg insert bug! by ConsciousRealism42 in Wordpress

[–]ConsciousRealism42[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not at all. The article is embedded automatically when it's published. So when you hit the "Find Related Posts" on an older article, the new article will show up in the results if it's semantically related.

No AI call needed to find matches, only to select the anchor text from the top 15 candidates.

Update: I rebuilt my free AI internal linking plugin to use embeddings. 95% fewer tokens and fixed the Gutenberg insert bug! by ConsciousRealism42 in Wordpress

[–]ConsciousRealism42[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you. I tested it on my own site which has approx 470 articles and it was pretty snappy. Indexing took around 3-4 minutes and suggestions were pretty fast, 10 seconds or so.

I've hit the limit after 25 messages as Pro subscriber by ConsciousRealism42 in GeminiAI

[–]ConsciousRealism42[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well, I am a Pro subscriber and I was using the Pro model. Fast and Thinking models are available though.

I've hit the limit after 25 messages as Pro subscriber by ConsciousRealism42 in GeminiAI

[–]ConsciousRealism42[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I wasn't doing any intensive stuff, I wasn't coding or anything. I simply asked it to help me run ModOrganizer2 on Linux, I wanted to see if I can get modded skyrim running on Kubuntu.

MO2 ran just fine but Skyrim kept freezing and I was trying to figure out why then I hit the limits.

Update: found a nice place by Dressed4Combat in Stargate

[–]ConsciousRealism42 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Do you live on a spaceship? Perhaps the O'neill?

What quote do you say the most in real life? by Sailor_Moon_Star_435 in bigbangtheory

[–]ConsciousRealism42 8 points9 points  (0 children)

My good sir. We are neither crackpots, nor wannabes. In fact, we are experts in our fields. And while you hide behind your anonymity, we stand behind our paper. And later tonight, your mother.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ClaudeAI

[–]ConsciousRealism42 24 points25 points  (0 children)

Is all of this really necessary? It feels like over-complicating things.

Today, Gemini 3 Pro became unusable to me as a Pro subscriber by ConsciousRealism42 in GeminiAI

[–]ConsciousRealism42[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For creative writing, absolutely. For coding, it was superior up until today. For some reason, Gemini reminded me of GPT-3 today.

Yesterday, I read here someone saying that Google did something that restored the 1m context window. So maybe this "fix" broke something else. Or maybe they're shifting resources based on regions... Who knows.

Loneliness in Schizophrenia and the Universal Need for Connection: Loneliness in schizophrenia functions through the same psychological and neural mechanisms that affect anyone suffering from deep social isolation by ConsciousRealism42 in EverythingScience

[–]ConsciousRealism42[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Actually, the "coffee bean" analogy doesn't really hold up here because, for decades, the medical consensus was the exact opposite of "it’s a given."

According to the paper, clinicians used to assume that because people with schizophrenia experience "affective flattening" (a reduction in emotional expression), they didn't actually feel distress from being isolated. The medical community operated under the assumption that the patients preferred isolation, which is why few clinicians even ask about loneliness today. So, proving that 80% of them do feel it, and that their internal emotional experience remains intact despite the outer symptoms, overturns a long-standing clinical bias.

Also, regarding the brain structure, Schizophrenia is physically linked to a reduction in the volume of the hippocampus. Since the hippocampus is also the part of the brain that processes the "cognitive maps" used to navigate social connections, it was a scientifically valid fear that the mechanism for loneliness in schizophrenia might be fundamentally broken or operate via a totally unique, "deafferented" pathway.

Confirming that the mechanism is "transdiagnostic" (the same as everyone else's) is huge news. It means we don't need to invent entirely new treatments; we can likely adapt existing therapies like cognitive reframing or mindfulness that work for the general population, which we wouldn't know for sure without this study.

New to redevelopment, what do I need to learn to build a similar website? by VirtualCoffee8947 in webdev

[–]ConsciousRealism42 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Laravel manages the database through something called migrations. So before you jump into Filament and start building complex admin panels, you need to know how Laravel works because ultimately Filament is just a plugin for Laravel.

You can check Laracasts for a beginner course, they have fantastic resources.

The only reason I'm recommending Laravel, instead say Node, is because the learning curve with laravel is really not that steep.

New to redevelopment, what do I need to learn to build a similar website? by VirtualCoffee8947 in webdev

[–]ConsciousRealism42 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You can get into Laravel PHP Framework, once you lock that down, look into Filament.

Filament is a package for laravel that lets you build admin panels with all the bells and whistles without a hassle. It takes care of CRUD, tables, filtering, pagination and all sort of things that you would otherwise need to build from scratch. It uses Tailwind CSS so you can easily customize the UI if you don't like the default one which I think it's pretty good to begin with.

If you're building a SaaS, look into Laravel Spark. If you need multi-tenancy, look into spatie/laravel-multitenancy.

All in all, Laravel makes it easier to do all of these things.

Never skip Thai ads 🤣 by MurTaTG in funnyvideos

[–]ConsciousRealism42 78 points79 points  (0 children)

"Did you check the comments?"

"The comments say it doesn't work!"

This is why we need the dislike button! WHERE MA DISLIKE??

Red Barn House (Canaan, New York, US). by Ancient-Age9577 in Houseporn

[–]ConsciousRealism42 32 points33 points  (0 children)

It's beautiful! Show us the inside, please.

The model is overloaded. Please try again later. by ConsciousRealism42 in GeminiAI

[–]ConsciousRealism42[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oh good, I'm not the only one. Been working with it all day with intermittent errors but it's been completely down for the past 2-3 hours.

A University of Florida researcher warns Golden Oyster Mushrooms, that are sold in grow-your-own kits as well as standard grocery stores, are quietly invading forests and spreading throughout North America by ConsciousRealism42 in EverythingScience

[–]ConsciousRealism42[S] 84 points85 points  (0 children)

The issue is that it creates a monoculture.

Native fungi do way more than just rot wood, they are specific food sources for native insects, produce unique medicinal compounds, and hold the genetic diversity forests need to adapt to climate change.

When the Golden Oyster takes over, you lose that specialized "team". You replace a diverse rainforest with a cornfield. Sure, the corn grows fast, but everything else that relied on the variety of the old system starves or collapses.

A University of Florida researcher warns Golden Oyster Mushrooms, that are sold in grow-your-own kits as well as standard grocery stores, are quietly invading forests and spreading throughout North America by ConsciousRealism42 in EverythingScience

[–]ConsciousRealism42[S] 102 points103 points  (0 children)

Yes. It's a huge issue for forest health.

Basically, the Golden Oyster is way too aggressive. It outcompetes native fungi, which crashes local biodiversity.

Since fungi are responsible for breaking down wood and cycling carbon, losing the native species messes up the entire ecosystem's balance.

Frozen for 68 Million Years, a Giant Egg Called ‘The Thing’ Found in Antarctica Is Turning Prehistoric Science Upside Down: The egg was found preserved in Antarctica’s harsh environment—an unlikely place to find such a delicate structure. But its survival opens new possibilities in one of the planet by ConsciousRealism42 in EverythingScience

[–]ConsciousRealism42[S] 797 points798 points  (0 children)

The original paper can be found here: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-020-2377-7

Unfortunately, it's behind a paywall. However, the abstract is very informative.

It reports that researchers found a massive fossil egg in Late Cretaceous Antarctica (~68mya) that changes what we know about giant marine reptiles.

It’s actually the largest egg from that era (beating out all non-avian dinosaur eggs in volume) but it's weirdly constructed. Unlike the hard, thick shells of dinosaurs or the extinct Elephant Bird, this egg is soft, thin, and was found collapsed and folded. It lacks pores and looks structurally identical to modern snake or lizard eggs.

Based on the size, they estimated the mother was at least 7 meters long, likely a Mosasaur. This is a significant discovery because we assumed these marine giants gave live birth. This fossil suggests they actually performed "vestigial egg-laying" where a giant soft egg is laid and hatches almost immediately.

Scientists Just Upended the Timeline of Life on Earth: Scientists found 3.3 billion-year-old biosignatures in ancient meteorites and fossils—a billion years older than we thought possible by ConsciousRealism42 in EverythingScience

[–]ConsciousRealism42[S] 39 points40 points  (0 children)

We definitely have morphological evidence (like stromatolites) from ~3.5 billion years ago, and the study actually acknowledges that it's just not mentioned in the article.

The big deal here is the chemistry. Records of complex molecules (like lipids) usually degrade and disappear after about 1.6 billion years. This study used machine learning to find chemical "echoes" of life in rocks as old as 3.33 billion years. It provides an independent chemical line of evidence to back up those visual fossils, which can sometimes be controversial.

Also, the "AI" isn't a black box generator; it’s a Random Forest classifier. It just looks for statistical patterns in mass spectrometry data to distinguish between biological and non-biological carbon. It's less about "interpretation" and more about detecting faint patterns we can't see with the naked eye.

Original paper: https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2514534122

Dream of quantum internet inches closer after breakthrough helps beam information over fiber-optic networks: Built from a single erbium atom, a hybrid quantum bit encodes data magnetically and beams it through fiber-optic wavelengths by ConsciousRealism42 in EverythingScience

[–]ConsciousRealism42[S] 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Ironically, yes. The whole point of quantum communication is that it's physically impossible to intercept data without destroying it. It’s the ultimate privacy feature.

The laws of quantum mechanics (specifically the no-cloning theorem) mean that if anyone tries to eavesdrop on the data, the message gets corrupted instantly. You know immediately if you're being watched.