Speaking as an ex-Facebook engineer it would be incredibly easy to get nefarious people employed there in an engineering role. Once inside, they have access to -all- user data; there is no actual access control (there are some basic access checks built into the Facebook application to keep you from accessing "private" data fields by accident, but all you have to do is edit that code and remove the access check and recompile Facebook on your laptop and you can access anything in the production database -- including peoples private Messenger chats).
Facebook warn you when you are hired not to actually do this, because they have auditing systems to watch for it and you will be fired (supposedly) but for people employed by some other agency specifically for the purpose of getting high-value private data out of Facebook, being fired by Facebook for doing so is part of the expected outcome and no big deal.
A well funded agency could easily keep getting people hired at Facebook to get whatever data they want, as often as they want. Facebook is constantly trying to keep their hiring pipelines full and despite the image Facebook likes to portray, it isn't "only the best talent" that gets a job there. There are some very smart, capable people at Facebook, but there are a ton of very mediocre engineers that lucked out in the hiring process, as well. It's really just a numbers game to get in.
I'm sure much the same is true at Google/Twitter/etc.
Then it wouldn't be unreasonable to assume that such nefarious people have already infiltrated Facebook and other tech giants. And they are not amateurs. Given the extraordinary value of access to the information possessed by the big tech corporations, we can expect a level of sophistication that would be on par with Cold War-era espionage.
we probably should though. The flu is different every year. Which is why we need new flu shots every year. Giving it a new name would help the public understand.
That's bad thinking: the public doesn't want to understand. The public is what on HN would be called a "bad manager", and says crazy shit like "don't bring me problems, bring me solutions!"
Curing the Flu is a solution. The public wants this, not a flu shot, no matter how impossible the task is. A flu shot every year is just band-aiding the problem, and redelivering said problem every year.
Well, maybe a cure would be if we were able to vaccinate everyone simultaneously and wipe out all the circulating virus. Perhaps this is becoming more realistic with the advent of mRNA vaccines and the promise of “vaccine printers”?
But, we’d also need to rout out all the reservoirs of flu virus in agriculture and nature that have the potential to jump species back to humans. That’s a lot of ducks, chickens, pigs, whales, horses, seals, etc to vaccinate or cull.
Fines I agree with, thought I suspect jail would make things worse.
Not just because jail is a health risk all by itself, but because compliance with the law depends on people collectively agreeing that the law is just, and excessive punishment does the opposite (or so I hear).
According to the chief medical officer for the American Lung Association, the only legitimate medical exemption is people who are on supplemental oxygen. Even patients with chronic lung disease can wear a non-N95 mask with no detrimental effects.
The CDC does recognize intellectual and developmental disabilities as legitimate medical exemptions, which I believe is the most common case we are seeing the US.
No, It has been determined time and time again that if you have a respiratory illness that means you're struggling to breathe so much that you can't breathe with a mask on, that puts you in the extremely high risk category from covid
The only legitimate reasons are associated with anxiety issues, which aren't medically exempt.
The only randomized controlled trial for masks and Covid-19 found no statistically significant protective effect. Jeremy Howard didn't even bother citing it in the review you're linking:
The Howard review is, in general, of extremely low quality. The top-line conclusions of some of the cited articles are completely mis-interpreted, and the citations within are sloppy and misleading -- bold assertions are made without evidence, and the reader is led to assume that a leading/trailing citation provides support for the claim, when it does not. There are far better reviews of the available literature. Here is one:
You'll note that they found a small positive effect for masks in the community, only when including and aggregating a large number of low-quality studies. They admit that the evidence base is weak.
In general, there's a great deal of uncertainty around the effectiveness of masks in the hands of the general public. There may be a small positive effect, but we simply don't know. One of the biggest mistakes of this pandemic has been the political weaponization of this issue, and the exaggeration of certainty -- on both sides of the debate.
I'm pretty happy with how it was handled in Germany. Masks clearly aren't marketed as a perfect solution, but as a key element in a mix of other measures that are social distancing, work from home, leave home for necessities, keep your distance during visits to the supermarket, etc.
I'm really surprised that masks turned out to be such a cause for drama. At the worst they caused discomfort, especially for people with big beards/prescription glasses, but if it turns out wearing masks helped just by a margin, isn't that already worth it, in the grand scheme of things? Isn't 1 live saved out of a 1000 already with the negatives?
That was the issue initially where scientific messaging clashed with public messaging.
People said "Will masks protect us?" and scientifically, the answer is no. No mask will 100% protect you
Unfortunately people take that and run with it to mean masks are useless and do nothing at all. If this has taught us anything, is that you can't give the layperson scientific information because they don't really understand the impact.
If the message from the start had always been "No it won't completely protect you, but wearing any kind of mask will drastically slow the spread" then maybe people would've been more receptive (And maybe the US wouldn't have politicised mask wearing)
Yes, I agree about the German approach. Japan (which I follow closely) is similar -- the issue of masks is drama-free, and much more pragmatic than in the US. But when I say "pragmatic", I mean it on both sides: you also don't see the insanity of people scolding other people over something with uncertain marginal effect. That's the part I can't stand here in the US.
I do think that of all of the things we have done in this pandemic, the act of forcing someone to wear something -- and on the face, no less -- is fairly obviously a politically fraught act. I'm not terribly surprised that the symbolism of the act became the story.
As for "politically fraught" - people are forced to wear things called clothes literally every day. Some are forced to wear business suits and other eccentric, uncomfortable, and context-specific attire.
People are also forced to wear seatbelts and act in other ways which show responsibility for public health - for example by not smoking in public areas.
The political point here is that masks - which have now been proven to be helpful - are only considered a 'politically fraught act' by people who want to politicise the Covid response.
For people who are rational about this, there is no issue.
For people who are hostile to public rationality, there is.
> There is no "uncertain marginal effect." The science is in, and it's clear.
Statements like this help no one. "The science" is not a noun. It is not "in". There is a great deal of uncertainty in what we actually know about masks. The article you're claiming is definitive proof admits as much:
"being more definitive about how well they work or when to use them gets complicated. There are many types of mask, worn in a variety of environments. There are questions about people’s willingness to wear them, or wear them properly. Even the question of what kinds of study would provide definitive proof that they work is hard to answer."
Again, please read the Lancet, CEBM and DANMASK links I linked above. You will see that there is a great deal of uncertainty.
it's like a condom for your face. What's not to love? I plan to keep wearing it even after this is all over.
In smarter countries, people wear masks whenever they are sick as a thoughtful courtesy to protect those around them. I'd like to see that attitude worldwide.
> it's like a condom for your face. What's not to love?
I know you're being cheeky here, but just to be serious for a moment: there's a HUGE literature on the subject of condom use and public-health messaging from the 80s and the HIV crisis. Condoms are...not exactly popular, of course (the TL;DR is that shaming doesn't work very well. Honesty and education >> scolding and shaming when it comes to behavioral change that is intimate and unpleasant).
It's continually astounding to me how many lessons from that pandemic seem to have been forgotten.
I find this need for certainty to be the most embarrassing part of this whole pandemic. What kind of person really cares how effective they are? They cost next to nothing, they’re comfortable and convenient. If they save one life, that’s worth wearing a mask.
Again to echo the person you’re replying to, the fact we still have to have this conversation is embarrassing.
> I find this need for certainty to be the most embarrassing part of this whole pandemic. What kind of person really cares how effective they are?
A scientist.
There are a great many things that we did during this pandemic that had no evidence whatsoever, and turned out to be wrong. Some turned out to be harmful (over-ventilation, for example). Are mask mandates one of these things? I have no idea. Neither do you.
It isn't wrong to admit that we don't know, because that's the first step to finding the answer.
Your argument would be sound except that masks are regarded as being completely safe. They are a no risk shot at saving lives. So again, what is the purpose of sowing this type of division amongst people?
> Your argument would be sound except that masks are regarded as being completely safe.
Prove it. So many assertions...so little actual evidence.
And for the record, I'm not talking about silly stuff like "wearing a mask raises my CO2 level". There's a very serious debate to be had about risk compensation -- because of the over-the-top messaging about masks, a large number of people think they're personally protected when wearing them. That can make people do risky things. Howard's review skims over the issue and pretends it is settled. It is not.
It's not clear at all that masks -- and in particular, mask mandates -- have a positive net effect. The RCTs on the subject certainly do not support strong claims of effectiveness.
No bud, after how you chose to speak to TheOtherHobbes, I'm not interested in continuing this. I have no interest in trying to educate you because with all due respect, you're far too unkind for me to devote more time to.
You've made up your mind and all you're doing is hurting people. This is pointless and I'm not going to be fodder for more of your bullying.
Ah yes...I'm "hurting people"...by asking questions and talking about evidence. An illustration of the major intellectual tragedy of 2020.
If we cannot ask questions and discuss them rationally without being accused of "hurting people", science is dead. This is a fundamentally anti-intellectual reaction, it is a way of villainizing people who question your opinions, and pointing it out is not unkind.
The one thing that defines fervent anti-maskers, anti-vaxxers, the "let's open for business while people are still dying" crowd, and others with bizarre beliefs is that they make their statements with absolute certainty, and with no admission that they might ever be wrong.
Medical understanding of Covid has made huge strides over the last year, precisely because doctors and researchers never claimed to be omniscient about the virus.
Meanwhile the deniers are still claiming the virus is "just a bad case of flu" and "masks don't do anything" and "lockdowns don't work" in spite of the accumulated mountain of evidence that those statements are nonsense.
> The one thing that defines fervent anti-maskers, anti-vaxxers, the "let's open for business while people are still dying" crowd, and others with bizarre beliefs is that they make their statements with absolute certainty, and with no admission that they might ever be wrong.
You have now commented twice in response to me, and in one post you cited an editorial in Nature as definitive proof of "the science" on masks, and now you are making black and white claims that would seem to group together people who question masks with "anti-vaxers" and other negative charicatures.
To the extent that I am making a claim here, it is that we need to be more circumspect in our discussions of science. I am advocating for less certainty, and more humility.
You seem to be making claims with a great deal of certainty.
> The one thing that defines fervent anti-maskers, anti-vaxxers, the "let's open for business while people are still dying" crowd, and others with bizarre beliefs is that they make their statements with absolute certainty, and with no admission that they might ever be wrong.
> Meanwhile the deniers are still claiming the virus is "just a bad case of flu" and "masks don't do anything" and "lockdowns don't work"
> There is no "uncertain marginal effect." The science is in, and it's clear.
> The political point here is that masks - which have now been proven to be helpful - are only considered a 'politically fraught act' by people who want to politicise the Covid response.
> For people who are rational about this, there is no issue. For people who are hostile to public rationality, there is.
All of these are examples of black/white thinking, straw-man and red-herring logical fallacies.
And again, this is cruel and divisive. At this point, you’re not being a scientist or even being critical. You’re just being cruel because you need to be right. That’s beyond me, dude.
I have never spoken to an individual with less understanding of humans or human emotion than you. That's almost amazing except that at this point, it's pathetic and dangerous for the world. Your entire tone is egotistical, overly aggressive and rude. Now no more of this, I genuinely wish that I had never engaged with you.
Everyone I’ve seen for the last year has been wearing masks.
Masks either don’t work in a meaningful way, or this pandemic is not meaningfully stopped by masks.
Our inability to stop exponential growth is not embarrassing. It is frightening how little the average human truly understands about exponential growth.
Your reasoning is incorrect. This virus is incredibly contagious. Just because we haven't been able to reduce R0 below one doesn't mean that precautions haven't been having a significant effect.
In a downpour, a car's windshield wipers may not be able to move fast enough to provide clear vision. This doesn't mean that they don't work or aren't making a significant improvement.
There is evidence that it reduces transmission somewhat: probably not a lot, but even a few percent will have an impact. The best thing to do, mask or not, is avoid close contact with other people. Avoid crowds; maintain 2m distance; and so on.
The advice has never been about protecting you or anyone else in particular, it is about reducing the transmission in the general population. With that goal in mind, small benefits can have a major impact overall.
If you have someone you live in close enough contact with that you are already going to be sharing any respiratory illnesses, you can do a simple experiment.
Have them stand across the room from you, without wearing a mask, and have them cough at you. Then have them move a step closer and do it again. Note where you can first feel the cough.
Then repeat but with them wearing a mask. You should find that they have to get much closer.
Second experiment. Having them at the place they ended up after the first experiment, have them cough at you without their mask on. Not subjectively how much cough seems to have reached you. Now have them put on their mask, and repeatedly cough at you until you feel the same total amount of cough has reached you. You should find that it takes many more coughs on their part.
For a virus that is expelled when you expel air and then sinks rather than lingering indefinitely anything that reduces the horizontal range of someone's expulsions, such as the above experiments demonstrate masks do, must decrease the number of viruses you will get from someone who is spreading it when you pass by them.
If nothing else, it's a constant reminder to people that there's a serious problem going on that we need everyone's help with to fix. Just another while longer, hopefully.
Yeah some people have done simulations to show the spread of particles with and without a mask. That's enough for me, I trust physics over correlational statistics.
Can we still question things, genuinely ? I think the most harmful consequence in the long term will be how we will accept to follow orders without questioning it. I have read different articles saying that no measures have been proven efficient against COVID. I think that many countries will use the masks to make people feel safe and keep going to work. Asian countries have been testing and isolating, while western countries let people work even when they are sick, by using masks.
tl:dr: Some indicators point to masks being useful but the data isn't conclusive and a lot of other factors might impact the data (such as other covid-19 related measures that help in keeping infection rates low) but these two quotes should be sufficient reason to wear them:
“There’s a lot more we would like to know,” says Vos, who contributed to the analysis. “But given that it is such a simple, low-cost intervention with potentially such a large impact, who would not want to use it?”
It’s not the only solution, says Gandhi, “but I think it is a profoundly important pillar of pandemic control”. As Digard puts it: “Masks work, but they are not infallible. And, therefore, keep your distance.”
whenever i'm at a store with a receipt checker I -out of sight of the checker- always take everything out of the bag and throw the bag itself away and pocket the receipt so i'm just carrying an armful of stuff, and then when I actually get to the receipt checker I just bolt and run right past them, trying to look as suspicious as possible.
All the land in the Bay Area was stolen from indigenous peoples as part of a pogrom of genocide. Many other areas in the United States have a similar issue. Until reparations are paid to the people who were here first, I have zero sympathy for so called "land owners".
The issue is that there is a power imbalance: since, in the United States we are living in a white supremacist society, ethnic solidarity among whites exacerbates the power imbalance, whereas ethnic solidarity among non-whites helps correct the power imbalance.
Eventually we could get to a world where no ethnic solidarity exists at any level but until power imbalances are corrected, not speaking and acting against white supremacy is just asking for the status quo to be upheld.
I edited my comment to clarify that the white supremacist society is the status quo in the United States. It also exists in some other countries. Certain countries have other supremacy issues; I've heard that in China, Han supremacy is a huge problem, but I can't speak to that as I haven't been there.
If you live in the US, and you don't see white supremacy, I encourage you to pay attention to what non-white people have to say about their experiences.
> If you live in the US, and you don't see white supremacy, I encourage you to pay attention to what non-white people have to say about their experiences.
That's like saying: "Q is everywhere and if you don't think so, I encourage you to listen to some Q supporters."
I encourage you to maybe focus on your worldview that monomaniacally reduces the entire world to an arena of skin color - never qualifying things, unable to contextualize.
Frankly, anti-racism is fundamentalism.
We traditionally called people that think in those terms: racists.
> in the United States we are living in a white supremacist society
Is this the kind of company training you would expect in a white supremacist society? Would a white supremacist society have an immigration policy that will soon make whites a minority?
It's not about reducing people to nothing but their skin color, that's a strawman argument. It's about recognizing that because the way society is structured, people have likely had a markedly different experience of life based on their skin color, and in a systematic way. It's about recognizing that we need a systematic approach to undo the accumulation of 400 years of these systematized differences. To ignore skin color, or as some people say, "I don't see color" is to refuse to confront the structural racism that got us where we are.
Facebook warn you when you are hired not to actually do this, because they have auditing systems to watch for it and you will be fired (supposedly) but for people employed by some other agency specifically for the purpose of getting high-value private data out of Facebook, being fired by Facebook for doing so is part of the expected outcome and no big deal.
A well funded agency could easily keep getting people hired at Facebook to get whatever data they want, as often as they want. Facebook is constantly trying to keep their hiring pipelines full and despite the image Facebook likes to portray, it isn't "only the best talent" that gets a job there. There are some very smart, capable people at Facebook, but there are a ton of very mediocre engineers that lucked out in the hiring process, as well. It's really just a numbers game to get in.
I'm sure much the same is true at Google/Twitter/etc.