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Space invaders: How video gamers are resisting a crypto onslaught

By - Aug 11,2022 - Last updated at Aug 11,2022

Zacary Egea shows his mobile while checking the status of his plant while playing the Plant Vs Undead video game in the Cuaricuao neighbourhood in the Libertador municipality of Caracas (AFP photo)

PARIS — When video game designer Mark Venturelli was asked to speak at Brazil’s biggest gaming festival, he submitted a generic-sounding title for his presentation — “The Future of Game Design” — but that was not the talk he gave.

Instead, he launched into a 30-minute diatribe against the blockchain technology that underpins cryptocurrencies and the games it has spawned, mostly very basic smartphone apps that lure players with the promise of earning money.

“Everything that is done in this space right now is just bad — actually it’s terrible,” he told AFP.

He is genuinely worried for the industry he loves, particularly because big gaming studios are also sniffing around the technology.

To crypto enthusiasts, blockchain will allow players to grab back some of the money they spend on games and make for higher-stakes enjoyment.

Critics say the opposite is true — game makers will capture more profits while sidestepping laws on gambling and trading, and the profit motive will kill all enjoyment.

The battle lines are drawn for what could be a long confrontation over an industry worth some $300 billion a year, according to Accenture.

Gamers like Venturelli might feel that they have triumphed in the early sorties.

Cryptocurrencies have crashed recently and dragged down the in-game tokens that had initially attracted players.

“Nobody is playing blockchain games right now,” Mihai Vicol of Newzoo told AFP, saying between 90 and 95 per cent of games had been affected by the crash. 

Ubisoft, one of the world’s biggest gaming firms, last year tried to introduce a marketplace to one of its hit games for trading NFTs, the digital tokens that act as receipts for anything from art to video game avatars. 

But gamers’ forums, many already scattered with anti-crypto sentiment, lit up in opposition.

Even French trade union IT Solidarity got involved, labelling blockchain “useless, costly, ecologically mortifying tech” — a reference to the long-held criticism that blockchain networks are hugely power hungry.

Ubisoft quickly ditched the NFT marketplace in Tom Clancy Ghost Recon Breakpoint.

Last month, Minecraft, a world-building game hugely popular with children and teenagers, announced it would not allow blockchain technology. 

The firm criticised the “speculative pricing and investment mentality” around NFTs and said introducing them would be “inconsistent with the long-term joy and success of our players”.

The wider sector also has a serious image problem after a spectacular theft earlier this year of almost $600 million from Axie Infinity, a blockchain game popular in the Philippines. 

Analyst firm NonFungible last week revealed that the NFT gaming sector crashed in the second quarter of this year with the number of sales plunging 22 per cent.

All of this points to a bleak time for crypto enthusiasts, but blockchain entrepreneurs are not giving up. 

Sekip Can Gokalp, whose firms Infinite Arcade and Coda help developers introduce blockchain to their games, argues it is still “very early days”.

He told AFP some of the attention-grabbing play-to-earn games had been “misguided” and he was convinced the technology still had the potential to “revolutionise” gaming.

Reports of a culture clash between gamers and crypto fans, he said, were overplayed and his research suggested there was substantial overlap between the two communities.

Gokalp can take heart from recent announcements by gaming giants such as Sega and Roblox, a popular platform mostly used by children, indicating they are still exploring blockchain. 

And Ubisoft, despite abandoning its most high-profile blockchain effort, still has several crypto-related projects on the go. 

Among the many benefits trumpeted by crypto enthusiasts are that the blockchain allows players to take items from one game to another, gives them ownership of those items and stores their progress across platforms. 

Vicol, though, reckons blockchain gaming needs to find other selling points to succeed.

“It could be the future,” he said, “but it’s going to be different to how people envisage it today”. 

Brazilian Venturelli, whose games include the award-winning Relic Hunters, used his talk at the BIG Festival in Sao Paulo to dismiss all the benefits trumpeted by crypto fans as either unworkable, undesirable or already available. 

And he told AFP that play-to-earn games risked real-world damage in Latin America — a particular target for the industry — by enticing young people away from occupations that bring benefits to society.

He said many people he knows, including venture capitalists and the heads of billion-dollar corporations, shared his point of view.

“They came to congratulate me on my talk,” he said. 

But with new blockchain games emerging every day, he accepts that the battle is far from over.

 

‘Total art’: Inside France’s vast video game archive

By - Aug 10,2022 - Last updated at Aug 10,2022

PARIS — In the bowels of an imposing modernist tower in Paris, Laurent Duplouy carefully handles a pristine copy of “Tomb Raider” before slotting it back on the shelf alongside thousands of other classic video games.

Duplouy oversees a huge archive of games at France’s National Library (BNF), one of the longest-running efforts to preserve a part of global heritage that is often overlooked by cultural institutions.

“The video game can be regarded as total art, because it combines graphic art, narrative art and a narrative structure,” Duplouy told AFP.

The 1990s glass and steel structure, a short hop from the banks of the River Seine, houses room upon room of archived books, where researchers and students quietly go about their business.

But Duplouy is adamant the video game collection is not out of place in the august surroundings.

“For the BNF, video games are as precious as the other documents deposited here,” he said. 

“We pay the same attention to them. It is cultural heritage in its own right.”

The treasured collection now holds some 20,000 titles in all possible formats, from cartridges to diskettes and CD-ROM, and adds a further 2,000 samples each year.

A team of 20 looks after the collection, empowered by a 1992 law on the preservation of multimedia documents.

While the law did not mention video games specifically, its wording is wide enough to be interpreted that way, making it one of the oldest pieces of legislation of its kind anywhere in the world.

The US Library of Congress only began its efforts to preserve digital media in 2000, and there are many other initiatives led by enthusiasts across the world.

 

Emulator hunt

 

The video games are stored on darkened shelves at a constant temperature of 19 degrees to protect them from humidity.

A few floors above, there is also an enviable collection of vintage gaming consoles — from the earliest examples such as the rare Magnavox Odyssey from the early 1970s, to the Atari Lynx and Sega Saturn, all the way to the Nintendo Game Boy, the ultimate 1990s icon.

“We are keeping these consoles to give future researchers, decades or even hundreds of years from now, an understanding of how to play these video games, what hardware was used,” said Duplouy.

While the consoles and physical games can be stored on shelves and behind glass, there are huge challenges with many games that can no longer be found in physical form.

For these, the library relies on communities of enthusiasts who re-create old games on modern computers.

“We have two engineers in the multimedia department who are constantly monitoring these issues to find emulators, make them work and make them compatible with our collections,” said Duplouy.

The archivists also face a problem that many games are now played in the cloud and never exist in physical form.

Duplouy said the library was locked in negotiations with publishers and platforms to find a workaround.

Ultimately, he said, the ambition is to hold the largest collection in the world.

“It would be great for French heritage,” he said.

 

Ancestors of mammals became warm-blooded later than previously thought

By - Aug 10,2022 - Last updated at Aug 10,2022

An artist’s reconstruction of the Mammaliamorph Kayentatherium, a member of the mammalian evolutionary lineage that lived in what is now the US state of Arizona during the early Jurassic Period (AFP photo)

PARIS — The ancestors of mammals started to become warm-blooded around 20 million years later than previously thought, researchers recently suggested, after analysing inner-ear fossils hoping to solve “one of the great unsolved mysteries of palaeontology”.

Warm-bloodedness is one of the quintessential characteristics of mammals, along with fur, but exactly when they first evolved the feature has long been a subject of debate.

Previous research has indicated that the ancestors of mammals began evolving warm-bloodedness, or endothermy, around 252 million years ago — around the time of the Permian extinction, known as the “Great Dying”.

However figuring out the timeline has proved difficult.

“The problem is that you cannot stick thermometers in your fossils, so you cannot measure their body temperature,” said Ricardo Araujo of the University of Lisbon, one of the authors of a new study in the journal Nature.

He was part of an international team of researchers that found a new way to determine how body heat changed throughout time, by examining the semicircular canals in the inner ears of 56 extinct species of mammal ancestors.

Fluid runs through the tiny ear canals, which help animals keep their balance.

The researchers realised that as body temperatures warmed up, so did the ear fluid. 

Araujo gave the example of oil used to fry hot chips.

Before you warm the oil up, it is “very viscous, very dense”, he told AFP.

“But then when you heat it up, you’ll see that the oil is much runnier, it flows much more easily.”

The runnier ear fluid led to animals evolving narrower canals — which can be measured in fossils, allowing the researchers to track body temperature over time.

Unlike previous research on this subject, the team developed a model that not only works on extinct mammal ancestors, but also living mammals, including humans.

“It can look at your inner ear and tell you how warm-blooded you are — that’s how accurate the model is,” lead study author Romain David of London’s Natural History Museum told AFP.

Using the model, they traced the beginnings of warm-bloodedness to around 233 million ago, in the Late Triassic period. 

Michael Benton, a palaeontologist at Britain’s University of Bristol who was not involved in the study, said the new metric “seems to work well for a wide array of modern vertebrates”.

“It doesn’t just provide a yes-no answer, but actually scales the ‘degree’ of endothermy in terms of actual typical body setpoint temperature,” he told AFP.

Benton, whose previous research had given the 252 million years date, said the transition to warm-bloodedness likely took place in stages, and “there were several significant prior steps before this semicircular canal switch”.

Araujo said the new research suggested that warm-bloodedness came about simply and “very quickly in geological terms, in less than a million years”.

“It was not a gradual, slow process over tens of millions of years as previously thought”.

David said it seemed unlikely that warm-bloodedness would begin around the extinction event 252 million years ago, because global temperatures were extremely hot then. 

That would have been a disadvantage for warm-blooded animals — but they could have thrived as temperatures cooled in the following millions of years.

“Being an endotherm allows you to be more independent of the whims of the climate, to run faster, run longer, explore different habitats, explore the night, explore polar regions, make long migrations,” Araujo said.

“There were a lot of innovations at the time that started to define what a mammal is — but also ultimately what a human being would be.”

Flight tracking exposure irks tycoons and baddies

By - Aug 09,2022 - Last updated at Aug 10,2022

Photo courtesy of flight-radar.eu

WASHINGTON — How to upset Russian freight companies, Elon Musk, Chinese authorities and Kylie Jenner in one go? Track their jets. 

Flight following websites and Twitter accounts offer real-time views of air traffic — and sometimes major news like Nancy Pelosi’s Taiwan trip — but that exposure draws pushback ranging from complaints to gear seizures.

Whether Russian air freight firms, Saudi Arabian plane owners or others, Dan Streufert said his group gets dozens of “requests” each year to stop posting aircrafts’ whereabouts.

“We have not removed anything so far. This is all public information. And I don’t want to be the arbiter of who’s right and who’s wrong,” added Streufert, founder of the US-based flight tracking site ADS-B Exchange.

Limits do apply in some cases, but groups that piece together the flight paths note that the core information source is legally available and open to anyone with the right gear.

US rules require planes in designated areas be equipped with ADS-B technology that broadcasts aircraft positions using signals that relatively simple equipment can pick up.

A service like Sweden-based Flightradar24 has 34,000, mostly volunteer-operated receivers around the world to pick up the signals, a key source of information that’s routed back to a central network and combined with data on flight schedules and aircraft information.

Figuring out or confirming to whom a plane actually belongs can require some sleuthing, said jet tracker Jack Sweeney, who filed a public records request with the US government that yielded a form bearing the signature of a particular plane’s owner: Tesla boss Elon Musk.

Sweeney has gotten quite a bit of attention with his Twitter account that tracks the movements of the billionaire’s plane and even rejected Musk’s offer of $5,000 to shut down @ElonJet, which has over 480,000 followers.

“There’s so much traction, I’m doing something right. The celebrity thing — people like seeing what celebrities are doing, that and the whole emissions thing,” he told AFP, referring to concerns over the planes’ greenhouse gas impact. 

“Putting it on Twitter makes it easier for people to access and understand,” Sweeney added.

 

‘We will track anything’

 

Another of Sweeney’s Twitter accounts, powered by data from ADS-B Exchange, showed in July that US model and celebrity Kylie Jenner’s plane took a flight in California that lasted just 17 minutes.

The Internet was not pleased and she faced a torrent of criticism on social media over concerns about the message it sent regarding climate change.

“They tell us working class people to feel bad about our once a year flight to a much needed vacation while these celebs take private jets every other day as if it’s an Uber,” tweeted @juliphoria, in an example of the outrage.

Neither Sweeney nor Streufert evoked a distinct redline they were concerned could be crossed by publishing the flight data.

“We will track anything because honestly, if somebody really was a bad actor, and they wanted to know where this stuff is, you can build the electronics for $100 and just deploy receivers to pick up the same signals yourself,” said Streufert from ADS-B Exchange.

Sweeney said “the data is already out there. I’m just redistributing it.”

There is also money to be made, but it’s not clear how much — Streufert acknowledged he makes a living but declined to provide specifics and Sweeney said his flight tracking work brought in about $100 a month. Flightradar24 didn’t provide its revenue.

The services’ information — as recently shown by the hundreds of thousands watching whether Pelosi would defy China’s warnings — has significant potential for impact far beyond embarrassment of celebrities or the rankling of billionaires.

For example, ADS-B Exchange’s data was cited in a non-profit group’s report alleging Europe’s border agency Frontex worked to prevent migrants from crossing the Mediterranean, while US media used it to show surveillance planes flew over racial justice protests in Washington in 2020.

In fact, dozens of US Congress members responded to the revelations by signing on to a letter urging the FBI and other government entities like the national guard to “cease surveilling peaceful protests immediately and permanently”.

In some parts of the world, governments have made clear the technology and resulting information is not welcome.

Chinese state media reported in 2021 that the government had recently confiscated hundreds of receivers used in crowd-sourced flight tracking, citing the risk of “espionage”.

“In many cases, it’s authoritarian regimes that don’t like this exposure,” Streufert said.

Nissan Kicks: Comfortable, confident youth-oriented crossover

By - Aug 08,2022 - Last updated at Aug 08,2022

Photo courtesy of Nissan

Putting to one side the seemingly 1990s nostalgia-inspired marketing campaigns of rappers and lip-synching contests pushing hard to position it as a youth-oriented crossover, the 2022 Nissan Kicks is still a reasonably fun, practical and comparatively affordable car — just like the outgoing model, introduced in 2017.

Face-lifted but otherwise mildly updated, the new Kicks features a design refresh, improved infotainment system and new trim textures and colours, but is powered by the same single engine and gearbox choice, and is offered in three specification levels.

 

Sporty styling

 

First introduced a an attainable and Brazilian-built replacement for both Nissan Juke and Qashqai models in certain — mainly developing — markets, the Kicks might not have been as wildly leftfield in its styling as the Juke. It was nevertheless an attractive and mildly adventurous design in its own right, with muscular surfacing, short but wide stance, fashionably descending roofline, bulging clamshell bonnet, and boomerang-style rear lights. Additionally, it was and still is offered with two-tone paint and blacked out pillars for a sporty floating roofline effect.

The 2022 Kicks features a more aggressive front treatment, with slimmer, sharper and higher-set headlights, deeper and bigger faux lower side intakes and a taller, wider and blacked-out grille with re-designed mesh. Its front lip and rear bumper are also mildly update, while rear lights are linked with a slim horizontal element. In weight, dimension and engaging ease of driving, it remains similar to a family hatchback, albeit with generous 200mm ground clearance to make short work of dusty dirt roads and urban bumps, potholes and kerbs.

 

Maintaining momentum

 

Carried over, the Kicks’ naturally-aspirated 1.6-litre four-cylinder engine develops 118BHP at 6,300rpm and 110lb/ft at 4,400rpm, and is progressive in delivery and with decent refinement and noise insulation. Responsive from idle and versatile in mid-range, the front-wheel-drive Kicks keeps a good pace when driven with light weight load and on relatively level and urban conditions, and is so moderately brisk when wrung hard to high revs. Accelerating through 0-100km/h in around 11.5-seconds, the Kicks returns frugal 5.2l/100km headline combined fuel consumption rating. 

Driven in a sportier manner or with additional passengers, the Kicks’ rate of acceleration obviously decreased, and consumption rose, when tackling steep, high elevation hill climbs. To be expected, this was, however, remedied somewhat by adopting a sportier, hatchback-like driving style, for which the agile and eager Kicks is happy to oblige. Turning in early and maintaining momentum through corners in such conditions, one needs to finesse the Kicks cornering angle to maintain grip at a brisk pace but without setting-off power-cutting stability controls.

 

Alert and agile

 

Smooth and efficient, the Kicks’ continuously variable transmission (CVT) prefers to keep revs at a more efficient low and mid speed range in normal driving conditions, but becomes more permissive in allowing revs to rise high with aggressive throttle inputs. With no simulated pre-set ratios to manually choose from, its CVT doesn’t always hold revs as high as desired during spirited driving, but has a “low” ratio setting for slow, steep inclines. However, it would potentially be more rewarding with a manual gearbox, as available in Latin America.

Riding on front strut and rear torsion beam suspension and weighing just 1,141kg — as driven in mid-range SV specification — the Kicks is nippy, tidy and keen to adjust cornering lines on throttle or to pivot weight with well-placed but small brake inputs. Sitting high but nevertheless nimble and alert, the Kicks’ damping is meanwhile taut and provides good rebound control. Well-balanced between adequate body lean control and ride comfort, it is forgiving if slightly busy and firm over some imperfections, but is smooth at speed.

 

Engaging 

and ergonomic

 

True to its hatchback-like underpinnings in its eager handling agility and manoeuvrability, the Kicks v engaging through narrow winding roads. Its electric-assisted steering is, meanwhile, direct, quick and accurate, but refined and stable at speed. Flickable and tidy turning-in, the Kicks’ steering and comparatively slim 205/55R17 tyres provides decent feel. With confident front grip, understeer is only apparent if one pushes too fast and tight into a corner. Meanwhile, front disc and rear drum brakes are reassuringly effective but can fade slightly on prolonged use on steep descents. 

Well-packaged, the Kicks’ stylish and ergonomic cabin features sporty flat-bottom steering, and a good mix of updated trim and fabric upholstery textures. Also receiving a larger, more capable infotainment system, it meanwhile features good front and decent rear passenger space, and accommodating luggage volume.

Slightly pricier than its 2017 predecessor, the Kicks features an alert, upright, and supportive driving position, configurable digital instrument pod and reversing camera to help with parking. It rear headrests are slightly forward jutting, lacks a rear armrest and features a single USB port.

TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS

Engine: 1.6-litre, transverse 4-cylinders

Bore x stroke: 78 x 83.6mm

Valve-train: 16-valve, DOHC

Gearbox: Continuously variable transmission (CVT) auto, front-wheel-drive

Transmission ratios: 4.006:1-0.55:1

Reverse/final drive: 3.77:1/4.01:1

Power, BHP (PS) [kW]: 118 (120) [88] @6,300rpm

Specific power: 73.8BHP/litre

Torque, lb/ft (Nm): 110 (149) @4,400rpm

Specific torque: 93.2Nm/litre

0-100km/h: 11.5-seconds (estimate)

Fuel consumption, combined: 5.2-litres/100km

Fuel capacity: 41-litres

Length: 4,302mm

Width: 1,760mm

Height: 1,613mm

Wheelbase: 2620mm

Track, F/R: 1,520/1,535mm

Minimum ground clearance: 200mm

Cargo volume, min/max: 432-/912-litres

Kerb weight: 1,141kg

Suspension, F/R: MacPherson struts/torsion beam

Steering: Electric-assisted rack & pinion

Turning circle: 10.4-metres

Brakes, F/R: Discs/drums

Tires: 205/55R17

Price, on-the-road, with comprehensive insurance: JD22,900 (as tested)

Warranty: 5-years or 300,000km

 

French bullfight foes eye coup de grace for ‘immoral’ spectacle

By - Aug 07,2022 - Last updated at Aug 07,2022

 

PARIS/BAYONNE — As thousands of bullfighting aficionados gather across southern France for traditional summer ferias, opponents of the practice are reviving their fight for an outright ban, confident that public opinion is finally on their side.

“I think the majority of French people share the view that bullfights are immoral, a spectacle that no longer has its place in the 21st century,” said Aymeric Caron, a popular former TV journalist and animal rights activist who was recently elected to parliament as part of the hard-left France Unbowed party.

For years, critics have sought a final legal blow against what they call a cruel and archaic ritual, but none of the draft bills presented have ever been approved for debate by national assembly lawmakers.

French courts have also routinely rejected lawsuits lodged by animal rights activists, most recently in July 2021 in Nimes, home to one of France’s most famous bullfighting events. 

But Caron, based in Paris, told AFP that the time was ripe for a new proposal given growing concerns about animal welfare, with a draft bill to be submitted this week.

“I do indeed hope this bill will be debated in parliament in November... it would be a first,” he said.

The prospect seems all the more likely after France Unbowed won dozens of new seats in recent elections, helping to strip President Emmanuel Macron of his centrist majority in parliament.

The goal is to modify an animal welfare law that allows exceptions for bullfights — as well as cock fighting — when it can be shown that they are “uninterrupted local traditions”.

Such exceptions are granted to cities including Bayonne and the mediaeval jewel of Mont-de-Marsan in southwest France near Spain, where the practice has its origins, and along the Mediterranean coast including Arles, Beziers and Nimes.

 

‘Respecting the animal’

 

For Caron, “it’s not a French tradition, it’s a Spanish custom that was imported to France in the 19th century to please the wife of Napoleon III, who was from Andalusia,” the countess Eugenie de Montijo.

That argument is unlikely to convince the jostling crowds who packed the streets of Bayonne for the bullfighting feria that ended last Sunday, a sea of fans clad all in white except for bright red bandanas or sashes.

“The people who want to ban it don’t understand it. Bullfighting is a drama that brings you closer to death... You’re afraid, but that’s a part of life,” said Jean-Luc Ambert, who came with friends from the central Auvergne region.

Like many other fans, his friend Francoise insisted that bullfighting is an art as much as a sport, where “a man puts his life on the line, while respecting the animal”.

“We’re not trying to convert anyone — I just want the people against it to leave us alone,” she told AFP.

The guest star of the Bayonne feria, Spanish matador Alejandro Talavante, did indeed find an appreciative audience, with the crowd demanding the award of the bull’s ear for his performance.

It’s a conflict that echoes the widening rift in France between rural dwellers steeped in deep agriculture traditions, and Parisians and other urban residents accused of trampling on the country’s cultural heritage — often derided as “the Taliban of Paristan”.

 

Widespread support?

 

Andre Viard, president of the national bullfighting association, shrugged off the threat of a ban.

“This comes up in every parliamentary session,” Viard told AFP of Caron’s efforts to find allies for the France Unbowed initiative.

“We tell the other parties: Why do you want to be associated with a bill that attacks a cultural freedom protected by the Constitution, and territorial identity?”

The debate echoes similar opposition in other countries with bullfighting histories, including Spain and Portugal as well as Mexico, Colombia and Venezuela.

In June, a judge in Mexico City ordered an indefinite suspension of bullfighting in the capital’s historic bullring, the largest in the world.

Caron is banking on support from across the political spectrum, including top members of Macron’s party such as the head of his parliamentary group Aurore Berge, who was among 36 lawmakers who called for a bullfighting ban last year.

An Ifop poll earlier this year found that 77 per cent of respondents approved of a ban, up from 50 per cent in 2007.

“More and more people are concerned about animal suffering, including in bullfights,” Claire Starozinski of the Anti-Bullfighting Alliance told AFP, adding that many people don’t realise that the bulls are actually killed.

“I know there are MPs from other parties who will support me, and have said so,” Caron said — though he admitted that more mainstream lawmakers such as Berge might be reluctant to join his leftish campaign.

“Is she going to remain true to her convictions, or make a political calculation that prevents her from supporting me? That’s what will be at stake in the talks over the coming weeks and months.”

There is no magic pill to lose weight

By , - Aug 07,2022 - Last updated at Aug 10,2022

Photo courtesy of Family Flavours magazine

Slimming down is on many people’s minds. But as I’ve come to learn for myself, there are no shortcuts to melting away fat. Avoid any magic potion that promises to do that!

Many of us remember watching Aladdin as children as he and Jasmine ride on that magic carpet to discover a whole new world. The movie industry has benefited tremendously from capitalising on our love for watching dreams come true and underdogs climbing from rags to riches. It touches that special place in our hearts that desperately wants to believe that miracles do happen.

It’s that same desperation we dieters have as we seek that magic pill. That pill that promises to take away your appetite so your scale keeps going down. Or the pill that promises the sun and the moon without you having to do anything to earn it.

The only place for a magic carpet is on the cinema screen and is purely for entertainment. Let’s stop fooling ourselves into believing we can manage our weight on a magic carpet while sweeping the real issues under the rug!

 

No to shortcuts

 

We may see some results from popping a pill or drinking a mystery solution, but trust me, researchers will discover that very pill causes cancer or kidney failure a few years down the road. We’ll find ourselves stranded at the side of the road that we thought would be our salvation.

Freedom from overeating isn’t free. Like anything else in life that is worth fighting for, it takes courage and hard work to accomplish lasting goals. It also means we have to be willing to give up some things and I’m not just referring to food. Food is the tip of the iceberg. Underneath lie a million other reasons we have resorted to feeding this addiction. Until we deal with underlying cause, we cannot even begin to heal from overeating.

 

Slowing down

 

This month, let’s mindfully and objectively slow down enough to think hard about what we want to accomplish and what small steps we can take to keep us motivated. Do you remember the tortoise and the hare story when we were kids? The hare took a snooze only to lose at the end of the race because as slow as that turtle was, it refused to give up.

We are that turtle. Slow and steady is what it takes, the opposite of what the marketing world advertises as they push one product after another with promises to help us with our weight issues FAST. The only fast thing they may accomplish is quickly depleting our bank accounts as they make money off of our desperation.

I will be honest with you and tell you that I threw out leftover pills just approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration to decrease appetite for the sake of weight loss. It took facing the truth head-on to love my body enough to protect it from something that could potentially prove harmful.

If you are popping those magic pills, you’ll be surprised at how empowering it is to throw them out before you find you’ve thrown your health to businesses that line their pockets with profit.

Here’s to staying healthy the good old-fashioned way and plugging along without stopping, like that turtle!

Reprinted with permission from Family Flavours magazine

Half of species not assessed for endangered list due to insufficient data risk extinction

By - Aug 06,2022 - Last updated at Aug 06,2022

Turtle hatchlings of the endangered loggerhead species head to the ocean after being released by conservationists on El Puerto beach, in La Sabana, La Guaira State, Venezuela, on July 29 (AFP photo)

PARIS — More than half of species whose endangered status cannot be assessed due to a lack of data are predicted to face the risk of extinction, according to a machine-learning analysis published on Thursday.

The International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) currently has nearly 150,000 entries on its Red List for threatened species, including some 41,000 species threatened with extinction. 

These include 41 per cent of amphibians, 38 per cent of sharks and rays, 33 per cent of reef building corals, 27 per cent of mammals and 13 per cent of birds.

But there are thousands of species that the IUCN has been unable to categorise as they are “data insufficient” and are not on the Red List even though they live in the same regions and face similar threats to those species that have so far been assessed. 

Researchers from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology used a machine learning technique to predict the likelihood of 7,699 data deficient species being at risk of extinction. 

They trained the algorithm on a list of more than 26,000 species that the IUCN has been able to categorise, incorporating data on the regions where species live and other factors known to influence biodiversity to determine whether it predicted their extinction risk status.

“These could include climatic conditions, land use conditions or land use changes, pesticide use, threats from invasive species or really a range of different stressors,” lead author Jan Borgelt, from the university’s Industrial Ecology Programme, told AFP.

After comparing the algorithm’s results with the IUCN’s lists, the team then applied it to predict the data deficient species’ extinction risk. 

Writing in the journal Communications Biology, they found that 4,336 species — or 56 per cent of those sampled — were likely threatened with extinction, including 85 per cent of amphibians and 61 per cent of mammals. 

This compares to the 28 per cent of species assessed by the IUCN Red List.

“We see that across most land areas and coastal areas around the world that the average extinction risk would be higher if we included data deficient species,” said Borgelt.

A global United Nations biodiversity assessment in 2019 warned that as many as a million species were threatened with extinction due to a number of factors including habitat loss, invasive species and climate change.

Borgelt said the analysis revealed some hotspots for data-deficient species risk, including Madagascar and southern India. He said he hoped the study could help the IUCN develop its strategy for underreported species, adding that the team had reached out to the union.

“With these predictions from machine learning we can get really sort of pre-assessments or we could use those as predictions to prioritise which species have to be looked at by the IUCN,” he said.

Head of the IUCN’s Red List Craig Hilton-Taylor said the organisation was continuously harnessing new technology with a view to reduce the number of data deficient species.

“We also understand that a proportion of data deficient species are at risk of extinction, and include this in our calculations when we estimate the proportion of threatened species in a group,” he told AFP.

Lost golden toad heralds climate’s massive extinction threat

Aug 04,2022 - Last updated at Aug 04,2022

Among the last photos taken of the golden toad in Costa Rica in 1978 (AFP photo)

PARIS — Those lucky enough to have seen them will never forget.

For just a few days every year, the elfin cloud forest of Costa Rica came alive with crowds of golden toads the length of a child’s thumb, emerging from the undergrowth to mate at rain-swelled pools. 

In this mysterious woodland the cloud drapes over mountain ridges and “the trees are dwarfed and wind-sculpted, gnarled and heavily laden with mosses”, said J Alan Pounds, an ecologist at the Monteverde Cloud Forest Preserve in Costa Rica.

“The soils are very dark and so golden toads would stand out like animal figurines. It was quite a spectacle.” 

Then in 1990, they were gone. 

The golden toad was the first species where climate change has been identified as a key driver of extinction.

Its fate could be just the beginning. 

For years, researchers have warned that the world is facing both a climate and a biodiversity crisis. Increasingly they say they are connected.

 

One in 10 face extinction

 

Even if warming is capped at the ambitious target of 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change says nearly one in 10 of all species face an extinction threat.

The golden toad was only found in Monteverde’s highland forest. So when trouble hit, the species was completely wiped out. 

“It was pretty clear about 99 per cent of the population declined within a single year,” said Pounds, whose research into the disappearance of the golden toad was cited in the IPCC’s February report on climate impacts. 

Climate change was barely on the research radar when Pounds first arrived in Costa Rica in the early 1980s to study amphibians.

But global warming was already beginning to take its toll. 

After the disappearance of the golden toad, the Monteverde harlequin frog and others, researchers compared datasets on temperature and weather patterns with those on local species. 

They found not only the signature of the periodic El Nino weather phenomenon, but also trends linked to changes in climate. 

 

Climate ‘trigger’

 

The die-offs occurred after unusually warm and dry periods.

Pounds and his colleagues linked the declines to chytridiomycosis infection, but concluded that disease was only the bullet — climate change was pulling the trigger.

“We hypothesised that climate change and resultant extreme events were somehow loading the dice for these kinds of outbreaks,” Pounds told AFP.

It was not an isolated incident. 

The expansion of the chytrid fungus globally, along with local climate change “is implicated in the extinction of a wide range of tropical amphibians,” according to the IPCC. 

The fingerprints of global warming have since been seen in other disappearances. 

The Bramble Cay melomys, a small rodent living on a low-lying island in the Torres Strait, was last seen in 2009. 

The only mammal endemic to the Great Barrier Reef, its populations were battered by sea-level rise, increased storm surges and tropical cyclones — all made worse by climate change.

Vegetation that provided its food plummeted from 11 plant species in 1998 to just two in 2014. It was recently declared extinct. 

Today, climate change is listed as a direct threat to 11,475 species assessed by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. Around 5,775 are at risk of extinction.

 

#MeToo for species

 

The main reason why climate change is increasingly cited as a threat to so many species is that its impacts are becoming more obvious, said Wendy Foden, the head of the IUCN’s climate change specialist group.

But there is also a growing understanding of the enormous variety of effects. 

Beyond extreme weather, warming can also cause species to move, change behaviour or even skew to having more male or female offspring. 

And that’s on top of other human threats like poaching, deforestation, overfishing and pollution. 

In 2019, a report by UN biodiversity report experts said one million species could disappear in the coming decades, raising fears that the world is entering a sixth era of mass extinction.

“It’s absolutely terrifying,” said Foden, adding that warnings of catastrophic biodiversity loss have often been overlooked. 

“We need a #MeToo movement for species, a whole wake up on what we are doing.” 

Almost 200 countries are currently locked in global biodiversity talks to try to safeguard nature, including a key milestone of 30 per cent of Earth’s surface protected by 2030.

But Foden said the threat of climate change means that the response will have to go beyond traditional conservation. 

“That can’t happen anymore, even in the most remote wilderness, climate change will affect it,” Foden said. 

In some cases, people will need to choose which species to save. 

Take the endangered African penguin in South Africa, which Foden wrote about for the IPCC report on climate impacts. 

Forced to nest in the open after humans mined their guano nesting sites, the adults now have to swim ever further to find fish, likely because of a combination of overfishing and climate change. Meanwhile, the chicks in exposed nests can die from heat stress. 

“We are down to the last 7,000 breeding pairs. At this point, every penguin counts,” Foden said. 

 

Cloudless forest

 

In Monteverde, even the clouds have changed. 

While rainfall has increased somewhat over the past 50 years, Pounds said it has become much more variable. 

In the 1970,s the forest saw around 25 dry days a year on average — in the last decade it has been more like 115. 

The mist that used to keep the forest wet during the dry season has reduced by around 70 per cent.

Pounds said sometimes tourists in the area stop him and ask directions to the Cloud Forest. 

“And I say: ‘You’re in it’,” he said.

“It often feels more like a dust forest than a cloud forest.”

Researchers have also seen steep declines in frogs, snakes and lizards and changes in the bird populations. Some have moved uphill to cooler areas, others have vanished from the area completely.

As for the golden toad, last year a team from the Monteverde Conservation League, supported by the conservation group Re:wild, launched an expedition to look for the golden toad in its historic habitat in the Children’s Eternal Rainforest, after tantalising rumours of sightings. 

But in vain.

Meanwhile, Pounds and his colleagues continue to keep an eye out for the golden toad during the rainy season. 

“We haven’t completely given up,” he said. 

“But with each passing year, it looks less likely that they’re going to reappear.”

 

First kisses may have helped spread cold sore virus around 5,000 years ago

Aug 03,2022 - Last updated at Aug 04,2022

Photo courtesy of pixabay.com

 

PARIS — The modern strain of the virus that causes cold sores has been traced back to around 5,000 years ago, with researchers suggesting its spread could have been propelled by the emergence of kissing.

Around 3.7 billion people — the majority of the world’s population — have a life-long infection of the HSV-1 virus behind facial herpes, according to the World Health Organisation.

But despite its ubiquity, relatively little has been known about the history of this virus, or how it spread throughout the world.

So an international team of researchers screened the DNA of teeth in hundreds of people from ancient archaeological finds. 

They found four people who had the virus when they died, then sequenced their genomes for research published recently in the journal Science Advances.

“Using these reconstructed genomes, we were able to determine that the variations of modern strains all trace back to some time in the late Neolithic, early Bronze Age,” said the ‘s co-senior author Christiana Scheib of Cambridge University.

“This was a bit surprising because it has been assumed that herpes is something that has co-evolved with humans for a very long time,” she told AFP.

 

Never been kissed

 

She said that was still true: all primate species have a form of herpes and humans likely had a strain when they first left Africa.

But the research indicated that those earlier strains were replaced by the modern form around 5,000 years ago.

So what brought about that change? The researchers suggested two theories. 

Around 5,000 years ago was a time of great migration from Eurasia into Europe, and that spread could have affected the virus.

The other theory? That was around the time when people starting romantically kissing each other.

“That is definitely one way to change the transferability of a herpes virus,” Scheib said. 

The virus is normally passed by a parent to their child, but kissing would have given it a whole new way to jump between hosts, she said.

“There is some textual evidence starting to show in the Bronze Age of kissing between romantic partners,” Scheib said. 

 

‘Far grander’

 

The researchers said the earliest known record of kissing was a manuscript from South Asia during the Bronze Age, suggesting the custom may have also migrated from Eurasia into Europe.

Kissing “is not a universal human trait”, Scheib pointed out, emphasising that it is difficult to trace exactly when it began — or if it is definitively linked to the spread of HSV-1.

Around 2,000 years ago, the Roman Emperor Tiberius was believed to have attempted to ban kissing at official functions to prevent the spread of herpes.

Co-senior study author Charlotte Houldcroft, also from Cambridge, said that a virus like herpes evolves on a “far grander timescale” than COVID-19, which the world has watched mutate in a matter of months.

“Facial herpes hides in its host for life and only transmits through oral contact, so mutations occur slowly over centuries and millennia,” she said.

“Previously, genetic data for herpes only went back to 1925,” she added, calling for more “deep time investigations” of viruses.

“Only genetic samples that are hundreds or even thousands of years old will allow us to understand how DNA viruses such as herpes and monkeypox, as well as our own immune systems, are adapting in response to each other.”

 

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