The top ten must-reads
I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.
1 Over 500,000 people have now died of coronavirus
There have been more than 10 million cases worldwide, with a quarter of those in the US. ( BBC)
+ Cases in Florida are up fivefold in just two weeks. ( NYT $)
+ States should have learned from hotspots like New York. They didn’t. ( Axios)
2 Starbucks will stop advertising on social media until 2021
Household names like Coca-Cola and Unilever have also joined a growing Facebook boycott. ( CNBC)
+ The boycott’s organisers want to expand it beyond the US. ( Reuters)
+ But this could all just be an empty gesture. ( Gizmodo)
+ Facebook has bent over backwards to accommodate Trump. ( WP $)
3 We have a “men refusing to wear masks” problem
Toxic mask-ulinity. ( WP $)
+ Why wearing masks really should not be controversial. ( Science News)
4 How the world missed the silent spread of covid-19
For months, health officials were convinced symptomless spreading was not important. ( NYT $)
+ Coronavirus has some eerie parallels with HIV in how it short-circuits the immune system. ( NYT $)
5 The FDA allowed the US to be flooded with flawed antibody tests
What is the point in a regulator unless they, you know, actually regulate things? ( CBS)
6 The UK is planning to spend hundreds of millions on the wrong type of satellites 🛰️
Nothing about this makes any sense. ( The Guardian)
7 Microsoft is going to permanently close all of its stores
It says no layoffs will result from the decision. ( The Verge)
8 A glimpse at our ghost kitchen future 🥡
Delivery-only restaurants are here to stay. ( New Yorker $)
9 There’s an unexplained radioactivity hike in Northern Europe
It looks like it’s blowing over from Russia’s direction. ( AP)
10 NASA wants YOUR ideas for a moon toilet 🚽🌑
Let’s not have a repeat of the messy horror the Apollo astronauts had to put up with. ( The Verge)
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