Facebook’s AI mistakenly bans ads for struggling businesses #SootinClaimon.Com

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Facebook’s AI mistakenly bans ads for struggling businesses (nationthailand.com)

Facebook’s AI mistakenly bans ads for struggling businesses

InternationalNov 28. 2020

By Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Sarah Frier · BUSINESS, TECHNOLOGY

New York-based businesswoman Ruth Harrigan usually sells her honey and beeswax products in souvenir shops. But with covid-19 pausing tourism, she’s been almost entirely dependent on Facebook ads to drive online sales. On Nov. 11, this new financial lifeline was abruptly cut when the social media company blocked her HoneyGramz ad account for violating its policies. She couldn’t imagine what about her tiny honey-filled gifts would have triggered the problem.

Friends told Harrigan to just wait a couple of days and the problem might resolve itself. She waited, until she lost an estimated $5,000 in revenue.

“I was getting a little anxious thinking, ‘Oh my God, Black Friday is around the corner, most of my sales for the year happen in November and December and that’s it,'” she explained. “I said, ‘If I’m shut down any longer than this, it’ll cripple me.'”

Harrigan is one of millions of small business advertisers who have come to rely on Facebook because the coronavirus has shut down many traditional retail channels. The social media giant has provided new sales opportunities for these entrepreneurs, but also exposed them to the company’s misfiring content-moderation software, limited options for customer support and lack of transparency about how to fix problems.

Facebook’s human moderators have focused on election and covid-19 misinformation this year, so the company has leaned more on artificial intelligence algorithms to monitor other areas of the platform. That’s left many small businesses caught in Facebook’s automated filters, unable to advertise through the service and frustrated because they don’t know why.

The same weekend Harrigan’s account went down, Ivonne Sanchez, who runs a permanent makeup clinic in Ottawa, found her ads were blocked too, for what Facebook said was a “policy violation.” Her business, which had to shut down between March and June for the pandemic, was relying on Facebook to recover financially. The account was restored the next day without explanation, but “in the middle of a crucial shopping season, it left us shaken,” she said. “This experience makes us very nervous about investing dollars into a system that is operated seemingly by a bot.”

Even if an ad account gets restored, businesses lose crucial momentum. Facebook’s advertising algorithm takes a couple of weeks to figure out which users may be interested in an ad, to refine the targeting. Jessica Grossman, chief executive officer of digital marketing firm In Social, said when her clients get hit, the hardest part is telling them their campaigns have to start over and their money won’t go as far.

“Facebook almost doesn’t realize the impact of their own algorithm and what that means,” Grossman said. There seemed to be no logic to the account bans imposed on In Social’s clients, she added. A pizza vending machine company, a reusable water bottle company, a coffee delivery service, a business coach and a hair weave company were all suspended.

“We know it can be frustrating to experience any type of business disruption, especially at such a critical time of the year,” Facebook said in a statement. “While we offer free support for all businesses, we regularly work to improve our tools and systems, and to make the support we offer easier to use and access. We apologize for any inconvenience recent disruptions may have caused.”

Facebook often touts its commitment to small businesses, as it defends its ever larger hold over their economic future. On a recent earnings call, CEO Mark Zuckerberg said this was a “major focus” that’s “more important now than ever” as covid-19 shifts commerce online. During a July ad boycott by major brands, Facebook’s revenue still grew, bolstered by small businesses rushing online to try to survive. The company added more tools this year for small businesses to sell directly to customers through its site, hoping these virtual shops become advertisers, too.

But while business owners agree that Facebook is a lifeline during the pandemic, they say it’s also an unreliable partner. Facebook’s ban on political ads around the U.S. election, for instance, affected companies that have no connection to politics, like a business selling bracelets to benefit refugees. A seed company was also blocked for sharing a picture of Walla Walla onions — which were “overtly sexual,” according to Facebook’s AI.

The company’s policies against cryptocurrency frequently trapped ads from a solar roof company, Human SOLR, because some of the acronyms used by the business are similar to cryptocurrency tokens. After that issue was resolved, Human SOLR’s ads were banned again for using phrases like “see if your roof qualifies.” Facebook’s software guessed the company was selling financial products, which are more regulated. After enough flags on the account, Brett Lee, who runs the business, gave up on Facebook ads. “My business is at a complete standstill,” said Lee, based in St. George, Utah. “My employees’ lives are at a standstill.”

GFP Delivered, a Chicago-based produce company advertising a way for people to avoid the grocery store during covid-19, had its Facebook ads shut down for two months without clear explanation, according to owner George Fourkas. He said he was able to fix the problem only after reaching out to old college friends who work at Facebook.

Yaniv Gershom, co-founder of digital marketing firm 4AM Media, said he had to cut 12 jobs partly because of Facebook ad account bans, which have lasted almost six months. “They give you zero feedback,” he added. “The only people who are OK are massive spenders who get a Facebook rep that can escalate issues and find out what’s wrong.”

In some cases, the business impact is hard to quantify. Matt Snow, co-founder of an apparel business called Boredwalk, said Facebook’s automated systems inadvertently flagged 40% of his company’s product catalog as unsafe late last month. That left Snow targeting the wrong products to potential customers. He eventually noticed and quickly resolved the issue with a Facebook sales manager, but Snow doesn’t know how long the products were banned, or even which other items were being advertised in their place. “Facebook is very black box about all their internal machinations,” he said.

Facebook has been automating content moderation for years, a transition it highlights in a quarterly report detailing how much content the company removes. In more nuanced categories such as “hate speech,” Facebook removed almost 95% of violating posts automatically in the third quarter, up from just 53% two years ago.

But that increase comes with more corrections. Facebook removed 22 million posts for hate speech in the third quarter, more than 3 times as many as a year earlier. The number of posts it later restored jumped by 40%.

Advertisers have been particularly hurt by these automated decisions in recent months. “It just exploded. They turned up the AI recently — somebody changed something — and all of the sudden everybody was getting shut down,” said Justin Brooke, founder of Adskills.com, which teaches businesses how to market on Facebook. “What are these small businesses going to do? They’ve got families to feed.”

One of Brooke’s own Facebook ads has a small written disclaimer saying it wasn’t open to those trying to sell adult content. That got flagged and taken down. Facebook’s automated explanation? The post didn’t follow the company’s community standards on “nudity/sexual activity.”

The over-reaction by Facebook’s AI is a side effect of the company taking more responsibility for the content on its platform, according to Guy Rosen, Facebook’s vice president of integrity. “As we take more action, we remove more content, there’s more opportunities also for those to be in error,” he said during a recent press call.

That’s what HoneyGramz’s Harrigan was told happened to her account. She eventually got desperate enough to Google names of Facebook employees who might help. She found Rob Leathern, the company’s director of ad products, and sent him a message on Twitter. Miraculously, he responded. A few hours later, Facebook sent an email restoring her account.

“They just said they turned it off in error,” Harrigan said. “They didn’t give me any feedback. They just reset the whole thing as if it never happened.”

But Harrigan won’t forget. She printed off the email and pinned it to her office whiteboard. “It was really, really scary,” she said.

PlayStations are hot with consoles drawing rare shopping crowds #SootinClaimon.Com

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PlayStations are hot with consoles drawing rare shopping crowds (nationthailand.com)

PlayStations are hot with consoles drawing rare shopping crowds

InternationalNov 28. 2020A GameStop store in Tampa, Fla., on Nov. 27, 2020. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by Eve EdelheitA GameStop store in Tampa, Fla., on Nov. 27, 2020. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by Eve Edelheit 

By Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Carolina Gonzalez, Richard Clough · BUSINESS

Good luck finding a PlayStation 5.

The newest video-game console from Sony Corp., alongside rival Microsoft Corp.’s updated Xbox, are arguably the hottest items this Black Friday as shoppers line up in person or swarm retailers’ websites hoping to snag one. GameStop Corp., one of the few retailers to do a brick-and-mortar release, saw shoppers line up as early as Thursday — some even set up tents — at locations from Norfolk, Va., to Salinas, Calif.

“There’s always an item, or a few items, people can’t find. The big hot item this year is Sony PlayStation 5 and Xbox from Microsoft,” Joseph Feldman, senior managing director and assistant director of research at Telsey Advisory Group, said in a Friday morning interview. “Those are the two new items that I keep hearing people ask for, especially at Best Buy and GameStop, and you just can’t find them right now.”

A highly coveted product is just what retailers need this holiday season. After a brutal year of economic lockdowns and retail distress, stores are hoping that pent-up demand can rejuvenate the industry even as new waves of Covid-19 sweep across the country. Health concerns notwithstanding, a big-selling item can draw shoppers who may end up buying other gifts, too, while browsing in-store or online.

To limit crowds, Best Buy chose to release the newest consoles only on its website, a decision that retail analyst Neil Saunders called “a miss,” given soaring demand.

“Best Buy could have done something creative with outside collection to manage the crowds,” he said.

Still, the shares are outpacing the market this year as Best Buy benefits from the remote-working and home-schooling trends during the pandemic.

“Best Buy is trading so well right now that they can afford to be picky,” Saunders said. The company’s shares are up about 29% year to date.

Google searches for gaming products were up again this week, according to a note from Baird Equity Research. Interest for “World of Warcraft” was up 96% after the launch of its latest expansion pack, while “FIFA Ultimate Team” was up 43% this week. The term “gaming headset” also saw a consistent increase in internet searches, up 24% week over week.

With all the interest in gaming, the new consoles are sure to draw crowds wherever they release. But there’s one reliable way to get your hands on them without lining up — pay resale. The consoles, which retail around $400 to $500 apiece, are selling for more than $1,000 on eBay.

Black Friday is here – and it’s completely different #SootinClaimon.Com

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Black Friday is here – and it’s completely different (nationthailand.com)

Black Friday is here – and it’s completely different

InternationalNov 28. 2020Black Friday shoppers come and go from a Target store in Falls Church, Va., on Friday. MUST CREDIT: Photo for The Washington Post by Amanda Andrade-RhoadesBlack Friday shoppers come and go from a Target store in Falls Church, Va., on Friday. MUST CREDIT: Photo for The Washington Post by Amanda Andrade-Rhoades 

By The Washington Post · Abha Bhattarai · BUSINESS, RETAIL

Black Friday sales are in full swing, but Trisha Stuart is unimpressed. The 55-year-old finished her shopping weeks ago – and did it all online.

A man has his temperature checked before entering an Apple store at Tysons Corner Center in Tysons, Va., on Friday. MUST CREDIT: Photo for The Washington Post by Amanda Andrade-Rhoades

A man has his temperature checked before entering an Apple store at Tysons Corner Center in Tysons, Va., on Friday. MUST CREDIT: Photo for The Washington Post by Amanda Andrade-Rhoades

She spent far less than usual – about $200 on an air fryer for her husband and gift cards for their four adult children – because, she said, “covid has put us on edge.” The retired nurse from Green Valley, Ariz., isn’t traveling this year. And when she does leave the house, she says, it’s mostly to pick up groceries; buying new clothes or housewares feels extravagant during these grim times.

Stuart is like millions of Americans who have tempered their spending since the coronavirus pandemic swept the country and set off a recession: More than 20 million Americans are collecting some form of unemployment benefits. Retailers, in turn, have had to reimagine the most important shopping season of the year with public health in mind. The Black Friday “doorbusters” they once dangled to draw crowds have largely shifted online, and in-store offers are being staggered to allow for social distancing.

Americans spent a record $5.1 billion online on Thanksgiving Day, which is 22% higher than last year but lower than projected, according to Adobe Analytics. Because so many consumers started their holiday shopping in October and early November, Black Friday week just doesn’t hold the same frenetic appeal, analysts say. Adobe expects overall online sales to grow 33%, to $189 billion, this holiday season.

It is unclear, they said, exactly how the holiday season will play out, especially at a time when coronavirus cases are rising at an alarming rate.

“There are so many unknowns – the economy, covid, unemployment – that could impact how willing customers are to spend this year,” said Scott Stuart, no relation to Trisha Stuart and chief executive of the Chicago-based Turnaround Management Association, a group that represents restructuring professionals. “We can’t lose sight of the fact that, fundamentally, everything has changed. Will there be more stimulus money? Will people be shy about spending? We just don’t know.”

Analysts and shoppers across the country reported lines to get into some stores, such as Best Buy, Lululemon and Bath & Body Works. But department stores and apparel chains, they said, remained largely empty on Friday.

“It’s definitely not as busy as last year,” said Todd Putt, a spokesman for Tysons Corner Center in Virginia, one of the country’s busiest shopping malls. “A lot of sales have already been going on for a while so people don’t feel the same pressure to come out and shop on Black Friday,”

At a Walmart Supercenter in Northwest Washington, the mood early Friday morning was decidedly calm. Signs at the entrance promised “Black Friday Deals for Days” and, indeed, the country’s largest retailer has been rolling out seasonal discounts online and in stores for weeks. Inside, there appeared to be little urgency among the shoppers as they browsed $7 children’s jeans and $49 cookware sets, which were also being offered online. An employee in a neon vest twirled a large plastic candy cane to direct the occasional customer down the store’s one-way aisles.

“No crowds,” said a worker taking a cigarette break outside the store. “A lot of people are shopping online.”

It was a similar story a few miles away at the Macy’s in downtown Washington, where a side lane had been blocked off for curbside pickups. Employees far outnumbered shoppers inside the store.

Beatrice Mintah stopped in for a $30 comforter set around 7 a.m. after finishing her shift as a health-care aide. “I just picked it up and now I’m leaving,” the 39-year-old said, adding that she typically shops online. “This is it for today because of the pandemic.”

The National Retail Federation this week projected healthy gains in holiday spending – 3.6 to 5.2% compared with the 3.5% average recorded the past five years – driven in part by grocery sales. The estimate suggests Americans will spend $755 billion to $767 billion.

But despite the rosy outlook, the trade group acknowledges there could be some bumps for an industry that was hurting even before the pandemic. Dozens of major brands have filed for bankruptcy this year, and many more have announced sweeping store closures and layoffs. Apparel stores and mall chains, which typically rely on holiday sales for a major chunk of their profits, have been among the hardest hit.

“It’s hard to quantify such uncertainty,” chief economist Jack Kleinhenz said on a call with reporters this week. The latest forecast, he said, is “part science, part judgment and, of course, part luck.”

Still, retailers are pinning their hopes on an early online shopping season that they hope will help make up for months of lost sales. Walmart and Target kicked off holiday sales earlier than ever, in October. Others, such as Best Buy, Amazon and Nordstrom, started offering Black Friday deals online on Sunday. (Jeff Bezos, the founder and chief executive of Amazon, owns The Washington Post.)

The shopping event looks different in-store, too. Store layouts have been reconfigured – wider walkways, one-way aisles – to discourage browsing. Target is allowing shoppers to circumvent front-door lines by reservation. There are new rules regarding masks, maximum occupancies and temperature checks.

It’s all added up to a subdued Black Friday at malls and strip centers across the country. In Sunrise, Fla., Renee Sainten arrived an hour early for her 10 a.m. shift at the mall, expecting large crowds and an overflowing parking lot. After a decade of working the busy holiday season at Sawgrass Mills outlet mall, she thought she knew what to expect.

She was shocked when she saw how empty it was.

“It’s usually so crowded, even on a regular weekend, that cars are parked on the grass,” said Sainten, 37, who works at the watch chain Tourneau. “Today I found a spot right in the front of the mall and thought, ‘Wow, is it really Black Friday?’ “

But long-held traditions can be hard to give up. In Clermont, Fla., Jacob Burlingame got in line outside GameStop on Wednesday evening, hoping to snag a PlayStation 5 when the store opened at 7 a.m. on Black Friday. The console, which sells for $499, has been sold out for weeks.

He put Thanksgiving plans with his girlfriend on hold, and spent two nights on the pavement, reading “Kingdom Keepers” and eating cheeseburgers from the McDonald’s Dollar Menu.

It’s been a tough year for Burlingame: His grandmother died of covid-19, and he lost his job at Disney World during the pandemic. He works remotely now, handling customer service for a local bank, and said he hoped a PlayStation 5 would help liven up his time at home.

“I wore a mask and staked out my spot for 33 hours,” said Burlingame, 25. “It was the one thing I was really looking forward to.”

But in the end, he didn’t get a PlayStation 5. Although the company’s flier had promised at least two PlayStation 5 consoles per store, workers told him they only had one.

Burlingame went home empty-handed on Friday morning. He put his Thanksgiving turkey in the oven and said it was time for Plan B: Shopping online.

Lia Dangelico has spent the past several months working from home – and buying online.

She plans to spend about $1,250 on holiday gifts this year, about $200 more than she did a year ago, because she won’t be traveling to see family.

“We always try to make it really special, but this year, since we won’t be together, I want everyone to feel extra special and loved,” said Dangelico, a communications director for a trade association in Springfield, Va. “We’re also super lucky to have secure jobs, so with so much staying in and no travel, we haven’t spent as much this year.”

The 33-year-old says she buys from small businesses, Black-owned shops and secondhand retailers when she can. She’s spent much of the pandemic stocking up on comfort items like incense, candles and a meditation cushion, and is considering buying a treadmill because she canceled her gym membership in the spring. Mostly, though, she’s been buying gifts for her eight siblings.

“It doesn’t make up for not being together,” she said. “But it just feels better.”

In El Paso, Dominique Olsson, 32, says she’s keeping things simple this Christmas: She’s already ordered T-shirts for her parents, a framed map for her husband and necessities like clothing and a step stool for her 2-year-old son.

“Our financial situation hasn’t changed much – my husband is military, I’m prior military – so there hasn’t been a fear of where our next check will come from,” Olsson said. “But still, I’m not trying to spend very much this year. We just never know what might happen.”

Early in the pandemic, she and her husband canceled family trips to Sweden and St. Louis. But even as they’ve adjusted to the pandemic, she says, she’s choosing more practical gifts this year. Olsson is helping her sister with a car payment and got her three nieces and nephews a six-month subscription to Little Passports, which offers educational activities they can do at home.

“We still want to do something for our family, but we want to make it more personal than just buying things,” she said. “I’m usually conservative with money anyway, but this year that feels even more important.”

Prominent Iranian nuclear scientist killed in ambush attack, bringing threats of revenge #SootinClaimon.Com

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Prominent Iranian nuclear scientist killed in ambush attack, bringing threats of revenge (nationthailand.com)

Prominent Iranian nuclear scientist killed in ambush attack, bringing threats of revenge

InternationalNov 28. 2020A U.S. soldier walks past a wall burned in the Iranian airstrike at the Ain Al-Asad base near Anbar, Iraq, on January 13, 2019. MUST CREDIT: Photo for The Washington Post by Emilienne MalfattoA U.S. soldier walks past a wall burned in the Iranian airstrike at the Ain Al-Asad base near Anbar, Iraq, on January 13, 2019. MUST CREDIT: Photo for The Washington Post by Emilienne Malfatto 

By The Washington Post · Kareem Fahim, Joby Warrick, Miriam Berger · WORLD, MIDDLE-EAST

ISTANBUL – One of Iran’s most prominent and well-guarded nuclear scientists was killed Friday in a daytime ambush on a rural road outside Tehran, an attack Iran’s foreign minister blamed on Israel and that sharply raised regional tensions in the closing weeks of the Trump administration.

The scientist, Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, was seen as a driving force behind Tehran’s disbanded effort to build a nuclear weapon nearly two decades ago. His role in Iran’s current programs – reactors and uranium enrichment – was less direct and analysts said the killing would likely have a limited impact on Tehran’s nuclear capabilities.

It also underscored one of the many challenges ahead for the Biden administration as it looks to reset U.S. policies toward Iran after President Donald Trump’s “maximum pressure” campaign.

Iran’s foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, described the attack the work of “state terror” and implicated Israel as having a possible role. Officials in Israel had no comment.

The attack – which Iranian news agencies said involved a car bomb and gunmen – recalled the shadowy killingsof Iranian nuclear scientists a decade ago and exposed holes in Iran’s security and intelligence agencies.

Just this year, it was the third high-profile attack to shake Tehran’s leadership.

In January, a U.S. drone strike in Baghdad killed Maj. Gen. Qasem Soleimani, Iran’s most powerful military commander and head of its special-operations forces abroad. And in August, Israeli agents acting on behalf of American officials assassinated a senior al-Qaida official in Tehran, according to a U.S. official.

Fakhrizadeh was once at the pinnacle of Iran’s nuclear program, including an effort to develop nuclear arms that U.S. intelligence says was scrapped in 2003. But his latest role was less directly involved in Iran’s nuclear sites, which include extensive centrifuge labs to enrich uranium.

While Fakhrizadeh had been a key figure in Iran’s bomb program, “that work is all in the past, and there is no reason to expect that if Fakhrizadeh is gone it would have any effect on Iran’s current nuclear program,” said Paul Pillar, a 28-year veteran of the CIA and a senior fellow at Georgetown University’s Center for Security Studies.

Analysts said the timing of the attack appeared linked to the impending change of U.S. administrations.

Trump – who withdrew the United States from a nuclear pact that Iran struck with world powers five years ago – has ramped up sanctions and other pressures on Tehran since walking away from a deal with world powers aimed at reining in Tehran’s nuclear program. Biden has pledged to work more closely with allies on Iran policies and work to rejoin the nuclear agreement.

Iran has recently increased its stockpile of enriched uranium since the Trump administration pulled out of the 2015 nuclear deal. Iran has insisted that the enriched uranium is intended only to power its nuclear energy plants and a research reactor. Iran’s foes counter that it puts the nation closer to producing warhead-grade material.

The Biden team also did not have an immediate comment. U.S. officials had no immediate comment, but Trump retweeted veteran Israeli journalist Yossi Melman, who described the attack as a “major psychological and professional blow for Iran.”

“The operation reflects thinking of those in the Netanyahu government – and/or the Trump administration – who see these next few weeks as their last chance to make relations with Iran as bad as possible, in an effort to spoil the Biden administration’s efforts to return to diplomacy with Tehran,” said Pillar, referring to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

A Middle Eastern intelligence official said Israel was behind the attack. “There was an opportunity and it was taken,” the official said.

Former CIA director John Brennan, a strong Trump critic, tweeted that the attack was “a criminal act & highly reckless.”

“It risks lethal retaliation & a new round of regional conflict,” he wrote. “Iranian leaders would be wise to wait for the return of responsible American leadership on the global stage & to resist the urge to respond against perceived culprits.”

Accounts of Fahkrizadeh’s killing indicated his movements were being tracked and the attack was coordinated.

The semiofficial Tasnim news agency said that the attack began with a car bomb that detonated in the path of Fakhrizadeh’s vehicle. Then “terrorists started shooting,” it reported.

But Brig. Gen. Amir Hatami, Iran’s defense minister, described a different chain of events in an interview with Iranian state television, saying the attack started with gunmen opening fire on Fakhrizadeh’s car. A pickup truck about 50 feet away exploded a short time later, he said. The gunfire continued, wounding the scientist and two of his bodyguards.

Fakhrizadeh later died at the hospital, the minister said.

A gray sedan, its windshield riddled by bullet holes, was shown in photos taken by Iranian news agencies at the scene of the attack.

The killing spurred calls from Iranian officials for accountability, or revenge.

“Terrorists murdered an eminent Iranian scientist today,” Zarif, Iran’s foreign minister, wrote on Twitter.

Iran has accused Israel and the United States of carrying out similar deadly attacks on nuclear experts in the past.

“This cowardice – with serious indications of Israeli role – shows desperate warmongering of perpetrators,” Zarif tweeted about the death of Fakhrizadeh. He said Iran calls on the international community, especially the European Union, “to end their shameful double standards & condemn this act of state terror.”

Hossein Dehghan, a former member of Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard and adviser to Iran’s supreme leader, wrote on Twitter: “We will descend like lightening on the killers.”

Fahkrizadeh “was one of the key individuals behind Iran’s nuclear program in the post-revolution era” and was deeply involved in shaping “the weapons phase of the program,” said Ariane Tabatabai, a Middle East fellow at the German Marshall Fund.

“This is very significant politically and symbolically. It again exposes the deep flaws in Iran’s internal security. This is one of many incidents involving Iran’s nuclear program this year and one of several targeted killings on Iranian soil or affecting high level Iranians,” she said.

Fakhrizadeh was widely regarded as the brains behind Iran’s nuclear program, including Tehran’s clandestine efforts to develop a nuclear bomb in the early 2000s. The physics professor, believed to be about 60 years old, has been identified by intelligence officials as the head of the Amad Plan, the secret nuclear weapons research program that sought to develop as many as six nuclear bombs before Iranian leaders ordered a halt to the program in 2003.

After the weapons program ended, he continued to supervise successor organizations that continued to employ many, if not most, of the Amad project’s scientists in conducting nuclear-related research, U.S. and Israeli analysts believe.

The current program is “now more focused on maintaining and developing nuclear weaponization capabilities rather than building the weapons themselves, said David Albright, president of the Institute for Science and International Security, a Washington nonprofit that tracks nuclear-weapons proliferation.

He called the attack on Fakhrizadeh a “shocking and disturbing development.”

Formerly a reclusive figure rarely seen in public, Fakhrizadeh has more recently allowed himself to appear on official Iranian websites, including during events held by Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Albright said the increased visibility “may have made him more vulnerable, making his movements easier to track.”

Targeted attacks between 2010 and 2012 killed at least four researchers and others with links to Iran’s nuclear program. Tehran accused Israel and the United States of masterminding the attacks as part of a covert war. U.S. officials have denied any role, and Israel has not commented.

In 2011, Darioush Rezaeinejad, an electrical engineer doctoral student whose work involved nuclear applications, was gunned down outside his Tehran apartment.

In 2012, motorcycle riders attached a magnetic bomb that tore apart a car carrying Mostafa Ahmadi Roshan, a nuclear scientist working at Iran’s main uranium-enrichment facility in Natanz. Roshan, 32, had planned to attend a memorial for another nuclear researcher, Tehran University professor Masoud Ali Mohammadi, who was killed in a similar pinpoint blast in 2010.

An Iranian man convicted in the Mohammadi attack, who Iran claimed was trained by Israel’s Mossad spy agency, was hanged in 2012.

Remote school is leaving children sad and angry #SootinClaimon.Com

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Remote school is leaving children sad and angry (nationthailand.com)

Remote school is leaving children sad and angry

InternationalNov 27. 2020Karen James embraces her daughter Olivia James, 7, during a break from school and work at their home in Alexandria, Va. MUST CREDIT: Photo for The Washington Post by Amanda Andrade-RhoadesKaren James embraces her daughter Olivia James, 7, during a break from school and work at their home in Alexandria, Va. MUST CREDIT: Photo for The Washington Post by Amanda Andrade-Rhoades 

By The Washington Post · Hannah Natanson, Laura Meckler · NATIONAL, HEALTH, EDUCATION, HEALTH-FEATURES

Sophia Sanchez, age 9 and stuck in perpetual Zoom school, is crying a lot lately.

Hannah Hopkins, 9, who attends fourth-grade in Lexington, Ky., drew this picture to capture how she thinks the coronavirus has affected life in the United States. MUST CREDIT: Courtesy of Hannah Hopkins

Hannah Hopkins, 9, who attends fourth-grade in Lexington, Ky., drew this picture to capture how she thinks the coronavirus has affected life in the United States. MUST CREDIT: Courtesy of Hannah Hopkins

Her mother and sister rush in and ask what went wrong. Did the Internet go out again? Is her computer plugged in? Is the math too confusing? Sophia can’t really answer. She’s too upset, wondering whether she’ll ever learn new things again, fearing she’ll fail the fourth grade and, more than anything, missing her friends. She hasn’t seen a single friend since March, when she was in third grade.

“So I just get really angry and frustrated,” she said. “I cry.”

Some children are doing fine with remote school; some even prefer it. But many others are like Sophia: They are suffering emotionally, mentally and even physically from so many hours, often alone, in front of a computer screen.

To gauge the struggle, The Washington Post asked parents nationwide to share stories and artwork produced by youths participating in the mandatory home-school experiment, garnering more than 60 responses from families living in 18 states.

School-age children are losing interest in food. They are complaining of back pain and burning eyes. They are developing feelings of depression.

It is unsurprising, even predictable, experts say, and likely to get worse the longer school campuses throughout the country remain shut down.

“The strain on kids is enormous,” said Matthew Biel, chief of the child and adolescent psychiatry division at Georgetown University School of Medicine. “Your 7-year-old wants to be recognized when they raise their hand. Oftentimes doesn’t happen on Zoom. They want to be able to make a comment, make a joke with a peer – can’t do that, no chatting allowed. Wants to be able to get up and walk around the classroom and move – can’t do that, we need to see your face on screen.”

He said it can be particularly hard for children with special needs, developmental delays or social struggles, but it can also be challenging for youths who simply crave friendship and the comfort of school rituals.

Especially for younger children, Biel said, the only way to express shock, sadness and displeasure is through emotional, sometimes violent outbursts and tantrums. And, although parents across the United States are rushing to reassure their children, they cannot provide the one answer that would help most – telling children when the pandemic will be over.

“This is just how life is now,” Biel said. “None of us can really share with our kids when it is going to end. We don’t know.”

Toby Weissbratten, who attends second-grade in Ashburn, Va., drew this picture of a globe wearing a mask to show how the novel coronavirus pandemic has reshaped the world. MUST CREDIT: Courtesy of Toby Weissbratten

Toby Weissbratten, who attends second-grade in Ashburn, Va., drew this picture of a globe wearing a mask to show how the novel coronavirus pandemic has reshaped the world. MUST CREDIT: Courtesy of Toby Weissbratten

For Creedence Peterson, the school day has become a lesson in discomfort.

It starts when the 12-year-old pulls on his uniform: white button-down shirt, gray slacks, blazer and tie, as mandated by his New York City private school. Then he sits down on his bed, where he will spend the next six hours attending an almost unbroken string of Zoom classes.

Immediately, the waistband cuts into his stomach. The blazer feels hot.

Two hours in, his neck starts to bother him. His muscles feel strained, stretched. Holding his head in the same position for so long is unnatural, just plain wrong.

But the worst is when his eyes start to water and itch, which they almost always do. Creedence rubs them, and that helps, but within seconds they hurt worse. Soon they’re bloodshot, so ghastly looking that his parents at one point tested him for pinkeye – but no, it was just from staring at a screen for so long.

One room over, his 8-year-old sister, Piper, who attends Zoom classes while in her bedroom, usually starts feeling lightheaded at Hour 3. Her eyes begin burning around then, too. She takes every one of the “stretch breaks” her school offers, but what she would really like to do is run out to the playground for a game of tag.

That, Piper is sure, would make her feel better – or at least closer to how she used to feel before the pandemic, back when she woke up every morning feeling happy. There wasn’t a particular reason, she said. She just remembers being excited for the day.

That almost never happens now. Instead, “you get frustrated and furious,” Piper said. “Like, you don’t want to look at a screen. You don’t want to be at online school. You start crying.”

Creedence said he is just as frustrated as his sister. He would like to complain about school to his friends – in online chats, because he can’t see them in person – but so many of his friends have moved away. There was the family that left for Florida, and the twins, once his best friends, who now live in the Hamptons. Their parents decided they didn’t like New York anymore, Creedence said.

Piper misses her soccer team. Creedence misses the doughnut shop across the street, which recently shut down because of a lack of customers.

When things get too sad or weird, the siblings like to lose themselves in video games. The nice thing about a video game, Creedence said, is that it lets you shape the world the way you want it to look – or, he clarified, the way you need it to look.

But as soon as he closes the console, the same fear surges back.

“We might never be able to go back to some of our favorite restaurants, because they closed down, and we might never really see our friends again, because they moved away,” Creedence said. “This may never get back to normal.”

Karen James works in late October while her daughter Olivia attends virtual school at their home in Alexandria, Va. MUST CREDIT: Photo for The Washington Post by Amanda Andrade-Rhoades

Karen James works in late October while her daughter Olivia attends virtual school at their home in Alexandria, Va. MUST CREDIT: Photo for The Washington Post by Amanda Andrade-Rhoades

At the start of the school year, Karen James tried to make things as normal as she could for her 7-year-old daughter, Olivia Gabriela James. She took first-day-of-school photos and dressed her up in nice school clothes. Olivia was right on time to her at-home workstation, in the dining room of the family’s home in Alexandria, Va.

But as time went by, James found there were holes she could not fill. Sometimes the mother felt helpless.

“Hands tied, I can’t change anything myself,” she thought. “And I’m doing the best that I can. Right? Which on some days doesn’t seem good enough.”

A single mom, James had to balance helping her daughter with her own demanding work-from-home responsibilities.

Olivia complained about technology (“It’s glitchy”) and missing her friends (“It’s really hard”). She longed to be in the same room with her teacher. The death of George Floyd added a layer of pain that Olivia, who is Black, is barely able to process. The second-grader glimpsed some of the news footage, and her mother felt forced to talk with her about injustices years before she would have liked.

“George Floyd died, and it just made me really sad, upset,” Olivia said. She knows exactly what happened. “The officer put his knee in his neck so he couldn’t breathe.”

The hardest blow came just before Olivia’s birthday, on Aug. 2, when James had to tell Olivia that her grandfather would not be coming to the house for her party. He comes every year, so when James told her daughter that he wouldn’t be showing up this year, she feared Olivia would think it was a trick, setting up some kind of super-special surprise.

“No, baby, really, this time Grandpa can’t come from Florida,” she told her. “It’s real.”

Olivia was in tears. So was her grandfather, leaving Jones forced to comfort both her father and daughter.

“I just think about the long term and how it will affect her academically as well as emotionally, and I try to give as many hugs and kisses and support as I can,” James said. “And I tell her, you know, we’re all doing this, like everyone in America this is happening to right now. But I wonder sometimes, you know – am I just talking over her head? So [I] just try to love on her, the best I can.”

Luke Pages, 12, who attends sixth-grade in Gaithersburg, Md., drew this picture to show how he thinks the novel coronavirus pandemic has reshaped his life. MUST CREDIT: Courtesy of Luke Pages

Luke Pages, 12, who attends sixth-grade in Gaithersburg, Md., drew this picture to show how he thinks the novel coronavirus pandemic has reshaped his life. MUST CREDIT: Courtesy of Luke Pages

Luke Pages, 12, has a lot of trouble guessing how his days are going to go.

Not because of online school – that’s predictable. He knows how many 15-minute screen breaks to expect. He knows he will be taught by seven teachers over the course of the week. And he knows exactly how tired he will be – and how much his head will hurt – by the third Zoom class.

The uncertainty is due to his constantly shifting emotions.

“Emotions” is not a word Luke used a lot pre-coronavirus. The sixth-grader, who lives in Gaithersburg, Md., with his parents and little brother, Ethan, never spent time thinking about how he was feeling before. The answer was almost always “good.”

He is still happy, sometimes. But that sense of well-being has an expiration date now, and he never knows how long it will last. On good days, an hour. On not-so-good days, 10 minutes.

On the most stressful days, he just starts crying and can’t stop.

Ethan Pages, 10, who attends fifth-grade in Gaithersburg, Md., drew this picture to capture how he feels most of the time since the pandemic began. MUST CREDIT: Courtesy of Ethan Pages

Ethan Pages, 10, who attends fifth-grade in Gaithersburg, Md., drew this picture to capture how he feels most of the time since the pandemic began. MUST CREDIT: Courtesy of Ethan Pages

“I don’t know why,” Luke said. “It’s like a roller coaster of emotions.”

Ethan, who is in fifth grade, has come up with his own words to describe what is happening inside his head. “Big feelings,” he calls it.

“I am feeling very sad and angry,” Ethan said. “Sad because I can’t see my friends and the people I miss. Angry because I have to see the same people, including my annoying brother.”

He also wishes he could see his teachers in person. Watching them on Zoom is “fine,” but the 10-year-old sometimes feels as if his teachers are not really his teachers – and he’s not a real fifth-grader – because he has never actually set foot in a classroom.

Ethan has questions about his lessons, and he doesn’t know how to put them into words that will make sense in an online chat or an email, which is the only way to win private time with the teacher. He would like to walk up to his teacher and explain his confusion with his hands. Sometimes, especially when school is hard, he closes his eyes and imagines doing that.

Luke, meanwhile, daydreams about something he always took for granted – the several-minute slices between every lesson. Back in real school, that is when he walked the hallways with his friends, headed for the next classroom. He can’t remember what they talked about – just random stuff, probably. Now, he can’t even see his friends’ faces, because not everybody likes to turn their cameras on for Zoom class.

Although the rest of his emotions have gone haywire, the 12-year-old said there is one feeling he can always count on: The end of every school day brings the same exhaustion and disappointment. If Luke could just go play football with his best friend after school, the way he used to, that might make him feel better. Instead, he’s developed a mantra.

“We’re all in this together,” he tells himself. “We will get through it.”

Annabelle Lisberg, 5, who attends kindergarten in Montclair, N.J., drew this picture to represent her feelings about online learning. MUST CREDIT: Courtesy of Annabelle Lisberg

Annabelle Lisberg, 5, who attends kindergarten in Montclair, N.J., drew this picture to represent her feelings about online learning. MUST CREDIT: Courtesy of Annabelle Lisberg

Sophia Sanchez in Los Angeles knows who she would like to tell about everything going wrong with her life – her best friend, Sofia, who shares her name and whom she has known since first grade. Before the pandemic, she and Sofia were working on an illustrated book about a spy. They drew side by side at recess, unfolding new details of the plot with every picture. And they talked – about school, what was happening that day, how it made them feel.

Sofia is the only friend Sophia has spoken to since school shut down. But her mother doesn’t have Sofia’s mother’s number, so Sophia messages Sofia through the chat function of an online game they both play. It’s OK, Sophia said, but it doesn’t really feel like she’s talking to her best friend.

If the coronavirus were somehow gone tomorrow, that’s who Sophia would want to see first. She would march straight back to normal school. She would head for the monkey bars, where she would race Sofia, just like before.

This time, for once, she’d let Sofia win.

Want to buy a gift for a gamer? Start by reading this #SootinClaimon.Com

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Want to buy a gift for a gamer? Start by reading this (nationthailand.com)

Want to buy a gift for a gamer? Start by reading this

InternationalNov 27. 2020

By The Washington Post · No Author · ENTERTAINMENT, SPORTS, VIDEO-GAMES

Odds are that any video game fan would appreciate the new PlayStation 5 or Xbox Series X, if you can find one. The next-gen systems make an obvious-but-expensive gift for anyone who loves video games, but aside from tracking down the latest, greatest and priciest consoles, finding a good gift for a gamer can be tricky if you’re not familiar with gaming.

Yeah, sure, you could hedge and buy a gift card to let the recipient pick out whatever they want, but purchasing a specific gift for the game enthusiast in your life better shows you understand and care for their passion. And that can be a gift as valuable as the present itself.

So, Step 1: Engage with your gamer. Find out what platform they use (is it a PC or a console like a PlayStation? Or do they mainly play on their smartphones?) and what types of games they like to play. Once you know those key factors, you can start figuring out how your gift can make their experience better based on how they like to interact with games.

Identifying age-appropriate options is easy, but understanding how the player approaches their passion is a little more nuanced. The gifts they may enjoy most likely hinge on how they like to spend their time gaming. Below are some broad types and some specific characteristics to define different types of gamers, as well as some gift ideas that may fit well for those in that category. And if you do opt for the PS5/Series X/S route, the video below can help you decide which is the best fit.

– – –

Are they competitive?

If they approach gaming like they would a sport, you may want to look into adopting a similar take on gifting. Look into ways you can help them improve their skills and win through better equipment.

Suggestions:

– A customizable controller

There’s nothing bad about the standard controllers that ship with consoles – heck, the PS5′s DualSense is revolutionary – but truly competitive players may like a chance to shape their handset to best suit their play, whether in the form of a modified, re-mappable controller or an amped-up keyboard and mouse.

The first aspect to consider is the number of inputs. Modern games can be complex with more commands than there are buttons on standard controllers. A gaming mouse with buttons on side (in addition to the standard scroll wheel and left/right top buttons) puts more commands at your finger tips. Likewise, adding some back buttons to a console controller not only adds more moves to a player’s menu, it can put actions in an easier-to-reach position. Many of these options are also made with materials that tend to be more durable than stock hardware.

Be sure to check out the individual features for each controller, as they are not universal and your gamer may have a preference in how the buttons are laid out.

Xbox Elite Controller Series 2: Adjustable thumb-stick tension, hair-trigger locks and a snug-and-comfy rubber grip offer a serious upgrade on the standard Xbox controller you can use on the Xbox One, Series X/S or on PCs using Windows 7 or later. ($179.99 through Microsoft Store)

Scuf Impact/Prestige: Super customizable, the Impact lets you tinker with pretty much every major feature to get the most out of a controller compatible with PS4 and PC. They’ll also work with PS4 games played on a PS5, but not PS5-specific games. (Starting at $149.99 through Scuf) Playing on an Xbox? The Prestige provides the same benefits for Series X/S as well. (Starting at $159.99 through Scuf)

Dualshock 4 Back Button Attachment: Even adding two extra buttons can go a long way and clip-on accessory delivers that help at a super-affordable price for PS4 users. Alas, it does not work with the new PS5 controllers as well. ($29.99 through PlayStation)

Hori Real Arcade Pro.V Kai: Some fighting game competitors prefer the feel of an arcade-like setup that uses a joystick and buttons instead of a controller (where buttons tend to be smaller and closer together), this one, recommended by Wired, provides all you need to get that arcade cabinet feel at home. Note, there are specific models for Xbox and PlayStation, be sure to get the right one. ($169.99 through Amazon)

Razer Deathadder V2 mouse: There are plenty of options for any budget when it comes to good gaming mice, but PC Gamer tops its list with a model that feels good, adds buttons and doesn’t break the bank. You may also want to check out their full list in case another option better aligns with your gamer’s preferences. ($69.99 through Lenovo)

Satisfye ZenGrip for Nintendo Switch and Switch Lite: The Switch consoles can be a pain to hold for long periods of time. The Satisfye grips may seem odd because of the asymmetrical design, but that’s to replicate the movement of extended thumbs on a real controller. There are two versions available for the regular Switch and Switch Lite. You won’t want to go handheld with the Switch without these again. ($28.99 for Switch, $26.99 for Switch Lite through Amazon)

– A better headset

When it comes to cooperative, team-based games, communication is essential. And as games become more immersive, sounds and audio cues have never been more important to fully comprehending an in-game situation. If your teammates can’t hear you, that’s a problem. If you can’t hear an enemy’s footsteps approaching your position, that’s a problem too.

Like anything, headset prices span the spectrum and some budget options (like those found in the series below) yield a great result, even if they don’t have a premium feel or lack some high-end features. If you want to make the most of the next-gen consoles though, be sure to snag a set with 3-D audio abilities.

JBL Quantum series: There are plenty of impressive headsets out there, but the Quantum line delivers a lot of features at a lot of different price points, making for a simple recommendation.

All of the Quantum models from the 300 series ($39.95) and higher offer surround sound and PC software for personalization. While they work with all platforms via a 3.5mm cord, they deliver the best experience when playing on a PC. The higher-end models include active noise cancellation and the top-of-the-line Quantum One ($249.99) even has a head-tracking feature, so if there’s a sound originating in front of you and you turn your head to the right, you’ll hear if in your left ear and quieter or not at all in your right. A directional mic with echo-cancelling features keeps you loud and clear, even if you’re playing in a noisy environment. The best aspect of these sets though is the snug and supple feel when you put one on your head. (Starting at $39.95 through JBL)

– – –

Are they into immersive games that demand a time investment?

If your gamer prefers a lean-back approach with lengthy, story-driven games that emphasize immersive entertainment, you could consider some accessories to improve their overall experience with their games, or even introduce them to new ones.

Suggestions:

Sony Pulse 3-D Wireless Headset: Games can be cinematic experiences, so why not put the audio on par with the stunning visuals? For those that want to experience the PlayStation 5’s 3-D audio at its best, we recommend Sony’s Pulse 3-D wireless headset.

The headset offers clean, bass-y audio, and a similar experience to surround sound – making audio feel as though it’s happening all around you. You may hear an arrow zoom past your ear or an enemy approaching from behind, which further embellishes the realism of the digital worlds you inhabit. It also has excellent dual, noise-cancelling microphones to pick up your voice clearly during party chat. (Starting at $99.99 through PlayStation)

A soundbar: If you want to fill the room with the sounds of the world surrounding your character, enhancing a sound system is a great way to take advantage of the native 3-D sound and Dolby Vision technology in the Xbox Series X/S, or the PS5′s 3-D Tempest AudioTech. The difference between 3-D sound and surround sound is that the former can produce a mass of audio sources that envelop the listener from a number of directions, not just wherever the speakers are located.

The options here aren’t particularly cheap, particularly if you’re trying to please an audiophile/snob, but a pair of more moderately priced soundbar/subwoofer packages (one from Sony priced at $398.99 through Crutchfield and one from Samsung at $397.99) can still unlock the audio potential of the new consoles. If you’re looking for other options, just remember to look for models that utilize Dolby Atmos.

“The Last of Us Part II”: Full of rich storytelling, meaningful combat and a world ripe with both wonder and danger, “The Last of Us Part II” does not disappoint – especially if you enjoyed the first installment. In this new chapter, you play as Ellie, who is older and angrier than the wide-eyed young girl she used to be. Witnessing her evolution is fascinating and heartbreaking, but it’s also a game that surprises in how it handles its wide cast of characters. Be sure the person your buying for can stomach violent content, however. There is no shortage of it. (On sale at $29.99 via Target)

“Spiritfarer”: In “Spiritfarer,” death is not the end – it’s the beginning. This management sim casts you as Stella, a young girl who becomes a ferrymaster for the dead, guiding them to the afterlife. You visit islands to convince spirits to hop aboard, and bring them comfort in their final moments by building them homes on the boat, feeding them their favorite meals, completing their final demands and sometime simply giving them a hug. This heartwarming tale is elevated by gorgeous visuals, as well as excellent platforming and a consistent feeling of discovery during exploration. ($29.99 through Steam, free with a Game Pass subscription through Xbox)

“Assassin’s Creed Valhalla”: Vikings. Need we say more? The newest chapter to the open-world “Assassin’s Creed” franchise puts you in the shoes of Eivor, a Viking leader who forms alliances across England to help their clan settle in the new land. Ubisoft marries old and new concepts, bridging the gap between stealth, combat, role-playing mechanics and lore in the most meaningful way for the series in years. (Starting at $59.99 for the standard edition through Ubisoft)

The Scuf Exo: You’re probably going to think of this as a gaming pillow, and you’re not wrong. And don’t buy this unless your intended recipient is the practical sort that doesn’t care what they look like while playing, because you’ll win no coolness points with this thing. What you do get is support for your wrists, allowing you to lay your hands and the controller on the pillow, which sits on your lap and supports your elbows as well. It eases tension in your shoulders, too, but the biggest aid is in allowing longer use of the PS5 controller, which is as weighty as it is awesome and can cause some strain during long gaming sessions. ($39.99 through Scuf)

– – –

Are they casual or extroverted players?

For a lot of people during the pandemic, and for school kids even before that, gaming has become a go-to way to socialize. Here’s how you can help them get a little more from their casual game sessions.

Suggestions:

“Among Us” (on PC): “Among Us” is a fun and sometimes broken social deduction game about rooting out killers on a spaceship. Its popularity partially stems from the boost it got from content creators playing the game together – not to mention the nearly record-breaking stream of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) – but another likely factor is that the game is free on mobile devices. That’s a fine way to play, but the optimal experience is on PC, where the game costs $5. It’s a minor upgrade, mostly sparing players of accidentally pressing the wrong button or steering their avatar in the wrong direction on a smaller screen, but it’s well worth the cost of admission. ($5 through itch.io)

Jackbox Party Pack: The Jackbox Party Packs are the easiest way to get a group of people with little to no game experience together for a session – bar none. The only requirement is for one person in the group to own a party pack, and for everyone else to own a phone or computer. Each party pack includes a sampling of minigames, though our recommendation would be to choose a pack with “Quiplash,” which is likely the most intuitive and fun of the bunch. The latest entry is Party Pack 7, though 3 is generally viewed as the gold standard of the bunch (and 4 is great too). (Starting at $12.49 through Jackbox Games)

Discord Nitro subscription: It’s likely that the social player in your life is already spending tons of time on Discord, the voice and chat service primarily geared toward gamers. It’s a great place to organize game sessions, host chats and private streams, and just goof off with friends. It’s a versatile free service by default, but a Discord Nitro subscription ($9.99 per month) – or even the cheaper Discord Nitro Classic package ($4.99 per month) – will open up some new features for power-users, including a higher upload cap and the ability to use custom emotes across servers. (Starting at $4.99 per month through Discord)

– – –

Are they experiential?

Some people enjoy gaming for its ability to approximate an experience they can’t replicate in everyday life. In the current pandemic, that can include things like getting outside, finding safe ways to socialize or seeing parts of the world you can’t currently access.

Suggestions:

Oculus Quest 2: Between an affordable price and the simplicity of just pairing your headset with a modern smartphone, the barrier to entry for virtual reality has never been lower. And while super-deep games aren’t yet the norm for VR (though that’s changing) there are a plethora of apps already on the market that allow users to sink into immersive 3-D experiences. If you want to dive into higher-powered games that require a PC connection, you can also snag the Link cable for an additional $79.99. ($299.99 through Oculus)

“Microsoft Flight Simulator”: The latest entry in Microsoft’s long-running flight simulator series flew under the radar for the wider industry when it was released, but that’s because the game can be tough to run, even on the most beastly PC setups today. But if you know someone who has a hankering for travel and has a decent PC rig, “Microsoft Flight Simulator” is a groundbreaking new project that recreates the entire Earth and all of its airports for travel. It’s a one-of-a-kind title, and the most impressive tech showcase of the year. ($59.99 through Xbox)

– – –

Are they streaming?

The pandemic has further boosted a growing trend of gamers streaming themselves and their gameplay on outlets like Twitch, YouTube and Facebook. If they’re trying to put themselves out there and grow their audience, you can help them put their best foot forward.

Suggestions:

Maono AU-04 USB Microphone Kit: As streamers acquire more and more technical capabilities with their streams, a higher expectation on quality is expected, one that the easy-to-use Maono USB Microphone Kit meets with style. The mic plugs in directly using USB, comes with an adjustable stand and offers industry-level audio capabilities like cardioid recording and high sampling rates. A great entry-level mic if you’re serious about streaming. (Starting at $49.71 per month through Amazon)

Aduro U-Stream Ring Light: The aforementioned heightened expectations of game streams also extend to the picture-in-picture quality of the streamer cams themselves. While several laptops and computers come with cameras capable of streaming at high quality, lighting on your face is the key ingredient to making your face pop. The Aduro U-Stream Ring Light, which comes with an adjustable stand and brightness controller, is one of the less expensive models out there but gets the job done. (Starting at $39.99 per month through Amazon)

Streamlabs: The final step to your streaming success is software that can tie everything together, and Streamlabs more than answers the call. It not only provides standard streaming capabilities like picture-in-picture and direct linking with sites like Twitch, but it also provides search engine optimization services to help your channel acquire more views. The best part? It’s free! (Starting at no cost through Streamlabs)

– – –

Are they nostalgic?

If they like to indulge on classic consoles or play vintage games, there may be a number of ways to recapture that “the time I got an NES for Christmas” feeling with throwback games and platforms.

Suggestions:

Turbo Grafx Mini: The mini-retro-console trend is overshadowed by the big box releases this holiday, but don’t sleep on Konami’s packaging of 16-bit-era classics. Anyone who grew up on gaming in the late last century would at least remember hearing about these games, even if you didn’t play them. With 57 titles, some of them impossible to find on the free market, it’s an incredible value for the retro gamer. You may need some luck to find one, however, as it is largely out of stock. (Normally $99.99 through Amazon)

“Streets of Rage 4”: Remakes and rehashes were huge in 2020, but none of them captured early 1990s arcade nostalgia quite like indie developers Dotemu and LizardCube did with their update to the Sega Genesis series. The core gameplay of “walk right, punch bad guys” is mercifully left alone, peppered with a few tweaks to tighten up the experience. “Streets of Rage 4” offers one of the purest brawling experiences today, a pixel-perfect present for purists. ($34.99 through Best Buy)

“Super Mario 3-D All-Stars”: Nintendo has finally collected three of the most memorable 3-D Mario games into a single package for the Switch: “Super Mario 64,” “Super Mario Sunshine” and “Super Mario Galaxy.” Beyond an HD update, Nintendo did little to update these games, so with all of their original blemishes intact, they’re exactly how you remember them. ($59.99 through Amazon)

“Sonic Mania”: This celebration of the Genesis-era Sonic games combines remixed versions of the original zones with brand new areas like Mirage Saloon and Titanic Monarch Zone. Clever tweaks have been made to the gameplay and level design, done with an incredible attention to detail. With the sleeker, modern sheen that Sega gave to “Mania,” it’s not a stretch to say that this is the best Sonic game ever made. ($19.99 through Best Buy)

Mega Man Legacy collections: It has been more than 30 years since the original “Mega Man” was released on the NES, but these platformers still hold up as a master class in gameplay and level design. Capcom has published several of these comprehensive collections, spanning decades of “Mega Man,” “Mega Man X” and “Mega Man Zero” games. In addition to extra game modes, the cherry on top of these archival compilations are the “museums,” which are packed with sketches, art and other visual materials from the original games. (Prices vary but normally $14.99 through Nintendo)

22 feel-good movies and TV shows you can watch with the whole family #SootinClaimon.Com

#SootinClaimon.Com : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

22 feel-good movies and TV shows you can watch with the whole family (nationthailand.com)

22 feel-good movies and TV shows you can watch with the whole family

InternationalNov 27. 2020Madison Reyes as Julie in Netflix's Madison Reyes as Julie in Netflix’s “Julie and the Phantoms.” MUST CREDIT: Eike Schroter/Netflix 

By The Washington Post · Bethonie Butler · ENTERTAINMENT, FILM, TV

The holidays will feel a bit different this year, but some traditions cannot be thwarted – like our annual viewing of “It’s a Wonderful Life.” Though your gatherings might be smaller than usual, there are a ton of family-friendly viewing options on streaming and a growing number of ways to make them a virtual group experience. We’ve rounded up some of our favorite kid-friendly TV and film picks below.

– “A Christmas Story” (1983)

Consider this a triple dog dare. (Streams on Hulu Plus Live TV/TBS)

– “Jingle Jangle: A Christmas Journey” (2020)

A toymaker who lost everything when his apprentice betrayed him is inspired by his granddaughter to return to the trade in this fantastical musical. It boasts an all-star cast – Forest Whitaker, Keegan-Michael Key, Anika Noni Rose, Hugh Bonneville and Phylicia Rashad – to boot. (Streams on Netflix)

– “Hair Love” (2019)

Matthew A. Cherry’s Oscar-winning short, about a little girl who helps her dad figure out how to do her hair, clocks in at just under seven minutes but will stay with you for much longer than that – especially if you’ve ever struggled to love your own hair. (Streams on YouTube)

– “Ratatouille” (2007)

We wouldn’t let Remy, the rat chef at the center of this Oscar-winning animated film, cook our Thanksgiving dinner, but we’ll gladly take his culinary tips while we wait for the musical conceived by TikTok users to materialize. (Streams on Disney Plus)

– “Coco” (2017)

This tender and vivid Pixar/Disney film is rooted in the Mexican tradition of Día de los Muertos, the annual time when families honor their departed loved ones, so it’s a great preamble to discussing grief with younger kids (or processing it at any age). The story revolves around a young aspiring musician who – in a quest to reverse his family’s long-standing rule against music – finds himself among his ancestors in the Land of the Dead. (Streams on Disney Plus)

– “Star Wars: The Clone Wars” (2008)

Force-sensitive families will enjoy this animated “Star Wars” series, which takes place between Episodes II and III of the Star Wars prequel saga and lets an intriguing heroine shine. (Streams on Disney Plus)

– “The NeverEnding Story” (1984)

This is familiar territory for ’80s kids, but why not let the younger generations see what movie magic looked like in the pre-CGI days? (Streams on HBO Max)

– “Paddington 2” (2017)

The marmalade-loving bear has a run-in with the law in this fun sequel, which features one of Hugh Grant’s finest performances as villain Phoenix Buchanan. The first film isn’t bad either. (Streams on Hulu Plus Live TV/TBS)

– “The Not-Too-Late Show with Elmo” (2020)

The lovable Sesame Street resident interviews celebrities and hosts musical guests in a typical but truncated late-night format: Each episode is just 15 minutes. (Streams on HBO Max)

– “Molly of Denali” (2019)

This animated PBS Kids show revolves around a young Alaska Native girl. The series won a Peabody Award this year for “helping to shift the ways that the next generation will think about Indigenous people and for giving native media-makers a central role in shaping their own representation.” (Streams on PBS Kids)

– “PBS Kids Talk About: Race & Racism” (2020)

This PBS special tackles a tough and timely subject through conversations with real kids and their parents, along with some good example-setting from fan-favorite characters including Arthur and Daniel Tiger. The broadcaster also offers some helpful resources for starting your own conversations at home. (Streams on PBS and YouTube)

– “Izzy’s Koala World” (2020)

Animal lovers of all ages will get into this docuseries following tween “Koala Whisperer” Izzy Bee, who takes care of cuddly marsupials with some help from her mother, a wildlife veterinarian, on Australia’s Magnetic Island. (Streams on Netflix)

– “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” (2018)

Miles Morales goes from Brooklyn teenager to superhero in this Oscar-winning animated film featuring an ensemble cast of voices (Shameik Moore, Hailee Steinfeld and Mahershala Ali among them) and, for what it’s worth, a song that toddlers seem to love. (Streams on Netflix)

– “Home Alone” (1990)

Is it even the holiday season if you don’t watch Macaulay Culkin (and Catherine O’Hara!) in this blockbuster and its 1992 sequel? (Streams on Disney Plus)

– “A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving” (1973)

The Peanuts gang has an eventful Thanksgiving feast in this holiday classic. (Streams on Apple TV Plus)

– “Julie and the Phantoms” (2020)

A teenager grieving the loss of her mom starts a band with three ghosts in this Netflix dramedy, which is far less morbid than it sounds – and perfect for musically inclined tweens/teens. (Streams on Netflix)

– “The Baby-Sitters Club” (2020)

Ann M. Martin’s treasured teen series gets a decidedly Gen Z update, featuring several charismatic new talents. (Streams on Netflix)

– “Toy Story 4” (2019)

Andy’s toys are back for another beautiful and emotional adventure in this Oscar winner. (Streams on Disney Plus)

– “Hamilton” (2020)

Lin-Manuel Miranda cut some coarse language out of his Tony-winning musical so even the kids could learn about the ill-fated Founding Father and his American Dream. (Streams on Disney Plus)

– “Anne with an E” (2017)

This Canadian series, an adaptation of Lucy Maud Montgomery’s famed children’s novel, finds Anne of Green Gables at her pluckiest – and has a passionate fan base that bristled over the show’s cancellation earlier this year. (Streams on Netflix)

– “Black Panther” (2018)

The late Chadwick Boseman is the heart of this breathtaking and culturally significant Marvel film. (Streams on Disney Plus)

– “It’s a Wonderful Life” (1946)

Every year – but especially this one – we can benefit from the life lessons in Frank Capra’s beloved Christmas classic. (Streams on Hulu Plus Live TV/USA)

Brazil recovery gains steam with surprising jobs, budget data #SootinClaimon.Com

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Brazil recovery gains steam with surprising jobs, budget data (nationthailand.com)

Brazil recovery gains steam with surprising jobs, budget data

InternationalNov 27. 2020

By Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Martha Beck · BUSINESS, WORLD, US-GLOBAL-MARKETS, THE-AMERICAS

Brazil surprised analysts with stronger-than-expected employment and budget numbers for October, a sign that the economic recovery seen in the past few months is gaining speed in the beginning of the fourth quarter.

The country created a record 394,989 formal job positions last month, nearly twice as much as expected by economists in a Bloomberg survey. Economy Minister Paulo Guedes celebrated the result, saying the country could finish 2020 with no job losses despite the coronavirus pandemic.

“This only shows that the economy is bouncing back in V shape,” Guedes told reporters after the numbers were released.

Meanwhile, the Treasury reported a primary deficit of only 3.6 billion reais ($680 million) for October, way lower than the 20 billion reais expected by analysts and following a large gap of 76.2 billion reais in September.

The budget surprise came on the heels of an economic recovery that has boosted tax collection at the same time as the government reduced cash handouts given during the pandemic. Companies that benefited from tax exemptions in the past few months also resumed paying them in October.

“The economic recovery played an important role in October’s result,” Treasury Secretary Bruno Funchal said at a news conference following the release of the data.

Latin America’s largest economy has started recovering in the third quarter, with the central bank’s economic activity index, considered a proxy for GDP, rising 9.47% from the previous three months. Yet the government is far from achieving a comfortable fiscal position — its 2020 budget deficit is estimated at 844 billion reais, or 11.7% of gross domestic product.

Mexico’s feminists continue occupation in calling for an end to violence #SootinClaimon.Com

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Mexico’s feminists continue occupation in calling for an end to violence (nationthailand.com)

Mexico’s feminists continue occupation in calling for an end to violence

InternationalNov 27. 2020Feminist activists and artists dance outside the Mexican human rights office, which for two months has been run as a shelter for women and children. MUST CREDIT: Washington Post photo by Marissa LangFeminist activists and artists dance outside the Mexican human rights office, which for two months has been run as a shelter for women and children. MUST CREDIT: Washington Post photo by Marissa Lang 

By The Washington Post · Marissa J. Lang · WORLD, THE-AMERICAS

MEXICO CITY – They’re groped on the train and abused at home. Girls are assaulted at school, women at work. They’re killed in big cities and small villages.

Doc, a member of feminist group Bloque Negro, is among the activists who have occupied the human rights office. She is seen in the courtyard of the Spanish colonial building in front of historic paintings the activists have defaced. MUST CREDIT: Washington Post photo by Marissa Lang

Doc, a member of feminist group Bloque Negro, is among the activists who have occupied the human rights office. She is seen in the courtyard of the Spanish colonial building in front of historic paintings the activists have defaced. MUST CREDIT: Washington Post photo by Marissa Lang

In 2020, on pace to become the deadliest year for women in Mexico on record, activists say there is no safe place left for women here.

So they have made one. They kicked the government workers out of the federal Human Rights Commission building in Mexico City. They covered the walls with the names of rape victims and hung posters with the faces of the dead. Then they invited women and children to shelter.

“In here, you realize that you’re not really alone, that we have all suffered some kind of gender violence and nobody has taken care of us – not the state, not the police,” said Cali, a 26-year-old member of the group Bloque Negro, who like others spoke on the condition that her full name not be used for fear of reprisal. “So, it makes you feel safe to know that in here we can take care of ourselves.”

The occupation of the stately marble building in Mexico City’s central historic district, which began in September, is one of the most extreme acts of a feminist movement that has grown more aggressive amid the intensifying violence and what its members say is official inaction.

Last year, authorities here reported a record 3,142 femicides – the killing of girls and women for their gender. Activists say an undercurrent of machismo that runs through every part of Mexican society – families, communities, the government – is as much to blame as the perpetrators who kill, on average, nearly 10 females a day.

Elected leaders “say that they don’t know why we are angry, they say that everything is fine in the country,” said Doc, a 21-year-old who helps treat injured protesters. “But the situation is abysmal.”

Protests to fight the physical and sexual violence have overtaken cities across the country. None of the activists’ demands – including police training, a public review of government actions to stop the violence and a guarantee of the protesters’ safety – have been met.

The shelter has been a safe harbor for women fleeing violent homes, abusive relationships, sexual assault, threats or the fear of being female in a country where researchers say femicides have grown by 130 percent in the past five years.

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has spoken against the violence. But he has also condemned the vandalism and violence at the feminists’ demonstrations. Protesters have dumped paint on statues, vandalized monuments, shattered windows and set fires.

López Obrador,a populist who rode a wave of dramatic demonstrations to prominence himself, has suggested the activists are protesting the “wrong way.”

“Without a doubt the feminist movement deserves all our respect, but I do not agree with violence,” he told reporters in September. “That we all achieve peace and tranquility, that is an objective that we have. We are working toward that.”

The activists say the vandalism isn’t a byproduct of their protests – it’s a tactic.

“For years, they protested peacefully, going to the Monument (to Independence) with photos and candles, and nobody paid any attention,” said a 22-year-old university student at the shelter who wore a black hood and mask.”It was not until private property began to be destroyed that the country turned to look.”

Yesenia Zamudio, whose 19-year-old daughter was found dead after being thrown from a fifth-floor window in Mexico City in 2016, is a frequent protester around the capital.

“I have every right to burn and break,” she told a crowd in a February.”I’m not going to ask anyone for permission, because I am breaking for my daughter.”

The approach carries risk. Protesters gathered in Cancún after the body of 20-year-old Bianca “Alexis” Lorenzana Alvarado was found dismembered this month. When they tore down plywood boards blocking the entrance and windows to the state attorney general’s office, police opened fire. Two journalists and several demonstrators reportedly were wounded.

A 2020 government survey found that nearly 80 percent of Mexican women don’t feel safe in their own country. Ten percent of criminal cases here result in prison sentences; when the victims are women, the percentage is lower. Human rights groups estimate that only about 2 percent of accused rapists in Mexico are ever jailed.

The World Health Organization has reported that approximately half of all women in Mexico will experience sexual or intimate-partner violence during their lifetimes. But many suffer several attacks.

Yaderi, a 36-year-old university student and retail worker who lives in Mexico state, said she has been sexually assaulted six times, beginning at age 7 and most recently six years ago. But it wasn’t until she had a daughter, she said, that she felt compelled to join the movement.

Two years ago, she said, the child came home from preschool crying. She told her mother a man had touched her sexually.

“I teach my children that their body is theirs, but we live in a country where that is not true – not for children, not for women,” she said. “Enough.”

Her last name is being withheld to protect her daughter’s identity.

Yaderi joined Ni Una Menos, a grass-roots movement across Latin America to fight violence against women and push for more effective laws and harsher punishments.

“All these girls know somebody that has been killed or disappeared, and they have watched the government do nothing about it,” said Angélica Nadurille of the Equity and Gender Collective. “They’re angry. And they are right to be – the government is part of the problem because they have closed their eyes to the problems that exist, and I think that is because of the personal belief of the president.”

López Obrador has said feminist groups have been infiltrated by his political rivals and co-opted to undermine his administration.

He has expressed outrage over violence against women, but he has also slashed funding to the National Institute of Women amid coronavirus-related austerity measures and threatened to withdraw government funding from shelters operated by nonprofit organizations – suggesting instead that women fleeing abuse could be given a direct cash payment.

“When the pandemic started, he said violence against women should be less because the home is a very safe place to be,” Nadurille said. “And when we said this is not true, that it will actually make things worse, he said no, that’s not possible, because the family is a happy place.”

López Obrador’s office did not respond to requests for comment.

Dozens of families have sought shelter at the human rights office. They sleep in converted offices and live off donated food and clothing.

Children race up and down hallways as mothers and volunteers prep meals in a communal kitchen and sort donations of clothes, art supplies and toiletries. Men are not allowed inside the building.

Those who have sought shelter here are looked after by a rotating cast of young women in black balaclavas – the Bloque Negro, or the Black Bloc.

Bloque Negro activists stand guard with baseball bats, hockey sticks and pipes. Atop a mini-fridge sit neat rows of ready-made molotov cocktails, rags hanging from the tops of old beer and tequila bottles.

It makes women like Erika, 42, and her 10-year-old daughter feel safe.

Erika, a working-class mother of three, was among the small group of women who took over the offices in early September. Today, she’s one of the handful that remain. Infighting has driven wedges in the movement and led some women to leave.

Zamudio has denounced the work of Bloque Negro at the shelter. In occupying the building, she said, they have lost sight of the movement’s greater purpose: justice.

But for Erika, the two go hand in hand.

“I took this building because in response to my complaint, I was forced to leave my home, I was stripped of my home … and the authorities did not protect me,” she said. “We are no longer fighting against the abuser, the rapist, but instead we are fighting this government, this system, these authorities.”

A housekeeper and doll maker, she and her youngest daughter moved into the shelter after months of homelessness. The two no longer felt safe in their own home, Erika said, after the child, then 7, said she was sexually assaulted by a family member.

For two years, Erika said, she begged police and prosecutors to do more to resolve her daughter’s case. Erika was sexually assaulted herself when she was 10, she said. But when she told her mother, her family did nothing to help her.

“How many women put aside their complaint because they prefer to work and eat than to lose their job, their life, like me?” she said. “I have lost three years of our lives, my daughter’s and mine, fighting for this man to pay and not do the same to other women. That is why we fight: to stop this from repeating.”

Her daughter can’t imagine a future that doesn’t involve living at the shelter, surrounded by women. An energetic child, she bounces as she talks and runs fast through the open courtyard as her dark hair trails behind her.

She likes that men aren’t allowed in, she said, and that the women are free to do and say what they like. She likes the wall paintings and the black hoods. She helped paint over an oil portrait of Francisco Madero, the tragic revolutionary hero. She gave him bright red lipstick; others filled in green eye shadow and purple hair.

“I’m going to stay here for my whole life,” she said.

Erika said the shelter has changed the girl’s life.

“She can sleep without worrying that something is going to happen to her,” she said. “She can enjoy the entire building without worrying that something is going to happen to her. I can let her run and play without worrying that something is going to happen to her.”

Russia’s vaccine volunteers swap stories – and antibody readings – as amateur researchers #SootinClaimon.Com

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Russia’s vaccine volunteers swap stories – and antibody readings – as amateur researchers (nationthailand.com)

Russia’s vaccine volunteers swap stories – and antibody readings – as amateur researchers

InternationalNov 27. 2020

By The Washington Post · Robyn Dixon · WORLD, HEALTH, EUROPE, HEALTH-FEATURES

MOSCOW – Their friends and relatives called them “test bunnies” and warned they risked horrible health problems from Russia’s entry into the vaccine race.

But a group of Russians, who dived in early as volunteers in trials of Russia’s Sputnik V, has emerged as amateur researchers before the official results of full Phase III data, still months away even though Russian officials on Tuesday asserted the vaccine was 95 percent effective.

Instead, they have set themselves in an online community – and, like members of a nerdy high school science team, they are doing their own explorations and analyses.

Nearly 1,500 people swap messages, answer questions and share antibody results and other health updates in an unofficial Telegram group that calls itselfCovid Vaccine Trial Volunteers.

It’s one of the quirkiest corners in the global race for a vaccine, with Sputnik V among other formulas from labs in the United States, China and Europe.

The online group welcomes newcomers, desperate to get into the vaccine trial, sending links to the best places for swift acceptance. They commiserate with disappointed participants who seem to have gotten the trial placebo shots. They plot graphs of results and symptoms and sling around technical information about antibodies and T-cells.

A few are experts, with a background in biochemistry or data research, but most are ordinary folk as Russia’s new cases reaching daily records of around 24,000 a day.

Russia’s government has not commented publicly on the web salon. But the chatter should seem familiar. Like Russian officials, almost all of posts in the Telegram group believe Sputnik V is effective.

“The satellite, damn, flies and beeps!” posted Dmitry Kulish, convinced in the power of the vaccine named after Russia’s first Cold War satellite.

Kulish, a biochemist and professor at the Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation at Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology, a private research institute in Moscow, took part in the trial because it was the only way to get the vaccine.

“Long story short: I got two shots and two days ago I got my antibody level and it’s really high so I am so happy about it,” he said in an interview.

According to Russian investigative website Proyekt, members of Russia’s elite, including tycoons and officials, were lining up to be secretly given Sputnik V shots even before it was registered in August. Russian officials have denied elite Russians got early insider access.

Many other Russians, however, remain skeptical of vaccination in general: 59 percent of Russians would not take covid-19 jabs, according to October polling by the Levada Center. The polling does not reflect the reasons for skepticism. But, as in Europe, the United States and elsewhere, the anti-vaccine lobby has taken hold in Russia in some quarters – as have conspiracy theories suggesting that covid-19 does not exist.

“As for the efficacy of the Russian vaccine or any other vaccine, I don’t think anyone knows. Only time will tell,” said trial volunteerAlexander Samsonov, 39, a member of the Telegram group who claimed that he got a strong antibody boost based on the Italian firm Diasorin’s Liaisontest, taken at a Moscow testing center.

Samsonov quit his public-relations job in the summer because his boss insisted that employees return to office-based work, where few bothered with protection measures like masks and gloves.

He eschewed his usual round of concerts, walks in the park, exhibitions and coffee-shop meetings with journalists. He stayed home for month after month, constantly glued to his computer, working freelance.

“I was stressed. I stayed home all the time,” he said. “You sit down all day and you put on weight.”

Samsonov decided to join the vaccine trial after his grandmother, 92, died of covid-19 and friends contracted the virus.

“They told me terrible things. Some got diabetes. Some got blood clots. And some had problems with their lungs,” he said.

But some colleagues and friends also poked fun at Samsonov’s protection measures, including masks and gloves. When he volunteered for the trial, they said he would be sorry.

“They told me – because the vaccine has not been tested to the very end, and because the vaccination thing is political – I would have health problems,” he said. “I would never have kids and I would develop various diseases because of this vaccine.”

But he described the vaccine, even still experimental, as helping lift his mood like the curtain rising on a premiere. He found a new job in public relations.

“I feel much calmer. I feel like I can get out of self-isolation now,” he said. “I can’t live in isolation until the summer of 2021.”

As global competition heats up, Russia is targeting markets in Asia, Latin America, the Middle East, Central Asia and Africa. President Vladimir Putin pushes the vaccine in every conversation he has with any world leader – jostling with rivals that include British-Swedish giant AstraZeneca in alliance with Oxford University, and U.S.-based Moderna and Pfizer, collaborating with Germany’s BioNTech.

Russia claims Sputnik V is 95 percent effective, similar to results reported by Pfizer and BioNTech, and Moderna.

Russia’s stance – in the words of loyal state TV anchor Dmitry Kiselyov – is to pooh-pooh the West’s vaccines as expensive and temperamental products that must be kept at very low temperatures. Sputnik V is freeze-dried and more easily stored and transported. Kiselyov compared it to one of the Soviet Union’s most famous exports.

“Sputnik V is like a Kalashnikov, simple and reliable,” he said on Vesti Nedeli television program earlier this month. “Just like any frozen product, Pfizer is likely to suffer logistical problems.”

Vladimir Rusetsky, 36 and his wife Yelena, both IT specialists, started the Telegram group to share information and were surprised to see how fast it grew.

They flew 1,670 miles from their home Omsk to Moscow – twice – to join the trial and take the two sets of shots. They were afraid of infecting their parents.

“When you have older relatives, it’s scary,” Rusetsky said.

Antibody tests after the vaccine showed their levels were high, he said.

He hopes that the group will persuade skeptics, including friends and family, to consider getting the shot when it is widely available early next year.

“My wife’s daughter, who lives in America, called us test rabbits. Now she sees that we have antibodies and her attitude has changed,” Rusetsky said. The couple still follow the rules on masks and gloves, mainly to set an example to others.

“Of course I have this feeling of relief,” he said. “Now I know my relatives will be safe. I will not pass on the disease to them and that calms me down a lot.”

Max Popov, a Canadian citizen in the Telegram vaccine community and a related Facebook group, said there was no reason to fear Russia’s vaccine. But he and his Russian wife, Natalia Khristyukova, had no antibodies after their clinical trial shots.

“Based on that I figured that both my wife and I are in the placebo group, unfortunately,” said Popov, who manufactures and installs television equipment in Russia

Rusetsky is sure he got the vaccine, not the placebo. He called it “life changing.”

“And if those people who did not want to be vaccinated look at me and change their minds and will get a vaccine,” he said, “that would just be great.”