Accurate, Focused Research on Law, Technology and Knowledge Discovery Since 2002

Daily Archives: September 19, 2024

A World of Waste: Risks and opportunities in household waste management

World Risk Poll: “As the global population continues to expand and development accelerates, the volume of waste generated worldwide is increasing at an unprecedented rate. Safely managing this growing waste burden is an escalating challenge with significant implications not only for the environment but also for human health, safety, and wellbeing. Download the report here

  • At a global level, plastic and food waste are what people throw away most. Four in five people (80% – 42% plastic, 38% food) say one of these two is the most common material in their household waste. There is a clear relationship with country income, with higher income countries primarily throwing away plastic and lower income countries primarily disposing of food waste.
  • Perhaps surprisingly, globally older people are more likely than younger generations to live in households that separate their waste, with those aged 15 to 29 equally as likely to separate their waste as not (47% each), compared with 60% separation among over-65s. This age differential is especially pronounced in Latin America.
  • When it comes to the disposal of waste, there are controlled methods (such as collection by local authorities), and uncontrolled methods (such as open burning by members of the household) which come with safety risks. Globally, more than two fifths (41%) of households dispose of their waste in an uncontrolled fashion, including 14% who use open burning (rising to 37% in low income countries).
  • Globally, smaller towns and rural areas are being left behind by government waste collection, especially in low income countries, where only 2% of people in rural areas and 5% in towns have their waste collected, compared with 39% in cities. In Southern and Eastern Africa, the gap between cities and rural areas is more than 50 percentage points.

Microplastics in the Olfactory Bulb of the Human Brain

Amato-Lourenço LF, Dantas KC, Júnior GR, et al. Microplastics in the Olfactory Bulb of the Human Brain. JAMA Netw Open [full text]. 2024;7(9):e2440018. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.40018. The ubiquity of microplastic (MP) pollution has become a pervasive environmental concern, raising questions about its occurrence within the human body and its harmful effects. While MPs have been detected in… Continue Reading

Visualizing Ship Movements with AIS Data

Beautiful Public Data: “As we run, drive, bike, and fly, humans leave behind telltale tracks of movement on Earth—if you know where to look. Physical tracks, thermal signatures, and chemical traces can reveal where we’ve been. But another type of breadcrumb trail comes from the radio signals emitted by the cars, planes, trains, and boats… Continue Reading

Flooded Again: Visualizing Repeated Flooding Across the U.S.

NRDC: “For communities across the country, flooding is an all-too-frequent experience—and, often, one with devastating consequences.  Over 250,000 properties in the United States have had multiple claims under the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP). These “repetitive loss properties” are found in every U.S. state as well as Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, and… Continue Reading

Snapchat reserves right to put AI-generated images of users’ faces in ‘My Selfie’ ads

NY Post via MSN – original article paywalled on 404 Media: “Snapchat reserves the right to put photos of its users’ faces in ads as part of the terms of service of its “My Selfie” tool, which lets people and their friends create artificial intelligence-generated images that are trained on their selfies. “My Selfie is… Continue Reading

Museo del Prado offers free online access to more than 11,500 publications from late 15th century to early 20th century

“The new Digital Library of the Museo del Prado, developed with funds from the Recovery, Transformation and Resilience Plan (PRTR), offers free access to 5600 magazine issues and 6,000 books specializing in artistic literature and published between the end of the 15th and early 20th centuries. More than 1,700,000 pages have been digitized, the cataloguing… Continue Reading

FTC Staff Report Finds Large Social Media and Video Streaming Companies Have Engaged in Vast Surveillance

Report recommends limiting data retention and sharing, restricting targeted advertising, and strengthening protections for teens – “A new Federal Trade Commission staff report that examines the data collection and use practices of major social media and video streaming services shows they engaged in vast surveillance of consumers in order to monetize their personal information while… Continue Reading

A handy guide to the universal language for the mathematically perplexed

Ars Technica: “Galileo once famously described the universe as a great book “written in mathematical language and its characters are triangles, circles, and other geometrical figures.” Unfortunately, it’s a language that many people outside of math and science simply do not speak, largely because they are flummoxed and/or intimidated by the sheer density of all… Continue Reading

How Opus Dei Conquered D.C.

Intelligencer via MSN – “A new book shows just how much sway the mysterious right-wing Catholic group has — and might have over Trump’s next term… Details of the Opus Dei network in the American capital are a significant part of a new, deeply researched book by British financial journalist Gareth Gore, Opus: The Cult… Continue Reading